I've never noticed this restaurant along Eighth Avenue near 40th Street... just across the way from The New York Times Building...
Was this restaurant always here? Did they change their name -- or font -- when the Times arrived across the street in 2007? A Sulzberger family side project?
(Times building photo via)
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Posts that I didn't get around to posting in 2009: No night deposit?
Here's the note that greets guests during after hours at the Provenzano-Lanza Funeral Home at 43 2nd Avenue ....
Posts that I didn't get around to posting in 2009: The work of a Red Sox fan?
Monday, December 28, 2009
We now know what building is for sale for $15 million on East Third Street (hint: buy an alleged illegal hotel and live next to the Hells Angels!)
Back in late October, we speculated about what home was for sale for nearly $16 million on East Third Street. (Read all about that right here.)
Now, thanks to a tip from a reader, we apparently have our answer: 73-75 E. Third St., directly to the west of the Hells Angels HQ. According to the listing, the 49 units in the buildings are going for $15.7 million...
75-75 E. Third St. is currently home to the Sanctuary Guest Streets, the vegan bed-and-breakfast with rooms going for $180 per night.
There are some Third Street residents who have alleged that this is an illegal hotel...(The DOB has received nearly a dozen complaints about the hotel in the last two years...)
And this was also the hotel with the guests who enjoyed relaxing on the bench in front of the Hells Angels HQ.
Perhaps, in the short term, the language should be changed to "not for hotel guests or potential new landlords..."
For further reading on EV Grieve:
The Hells Angels kindly request that hotel guests please refrain from sitting on their bench
Continuing to speculate about what 10-room, $15-million home is for sale on East Third Street
Now, thanks to a tip from a reader, we apparently have our answer: 73-75 E. Third St., directly to the west of the Hells Angels HQ. According to the listing, the 49 units in the buildings are going for $15.7 million...
75-75 E. Third St. is currently home to the Sanctuary Guest Streets, the vegan bed-and-breakfast with rooms going for $180 per night.
There are some Third Street residents who have alleged that this is an illegal hotel...(The DOB has received nearly a dozen complaints about the hotel in the last two years...)
And this was also the hotel with the guests who enjoyed relaxing on the bench in front of the Hells Angels HQ.
Perhaps, in the short term, the language should be changed to "not for hotel guests or potential new landlords..."
For further reading on EV Grieve:
The Hells Angels kindly request that hotel guests please refrain from sitting on their bench
Continuing to speculate about what 10-room, $15-million home is for sale on East Third Street
Labels:
benches,
East Village streetscenes,
for sale,
Hells Angels,
Third Street
Moving away because of those sausage-party dinners at Schiller’s
Well, you may have already seen this breakup letter in the Times this past weekend... John Vorwald, a former editor at The New York Observer, who lived at the corner of Ludlow and Rivington Streets for six years, decided enough was enough with the yunnies and he's moving on...
You gussied yourself up with shiny new hardware: Thor, Fat Baby, Spitzer’s. Hordes of banker boys in J. Press checked shirt/chino uniforms and manicured necklines swarmed to you faster than to the promise of a government bailout. They enjoyed sausage-party dinners at Schiller’s (“It’s like Pastis, but edgy!”), used winter as a verb and eyed sun-speckled Germans and Australians “on holiday.”
Toothsome Upper East Side girl packs (never fewer than four) tarted up in too-new Lilly Pulitzer dresses and slurped down sugar-free Red Bull and Grey Gooses at the Stanton Social. Hipster millennials, rocking extra-skinny jeans, oversize Elton John glasses and cocked-back fedoras, turned Pianos and Welcome to the Johnsons into their own private Thompson Twins video. Hold me now. Hold my heart.
Under wraps: Work starts on two high-profile new East Village eateries
First, at the former Australian Homemade ice cream/candy shop on St. Mark's Place near Avenue A ... where, as Eater reported, Michael Huyh may or may not open his Asian-Taco joint called Baorrito here... In any event, Huyn is opening something here...
Meanwhile, on the Bowery and Second Street, at the former Kelley & Ping space... As Fork in the Road noted, Taavo Somer and his Freemans crew are opening a "classic American diner" here. Per the Voice from the Nov. 16 CB3/SLA meeting: "Somer plans to fully utilize the bi-level space, creating a 63-seat restaurant with a 38-foot counter on the first floor and a 19-foot bar on the second. His application met with a show of support from members of the community, who bemoaned the current state of the abandoned restaurant, which has become a haven for drug deals and muggings."
Meanwhile, on the Bowery and Second Street, at the former Kelley & Ping space... As Fork in the Road noted, Taavo Somer and his Freemans crew are opening a "classic American diner" here. Per the Voice from the Nov. 16 CB3/SLA meeting: "Somer plans to fully utilize the bi-level space, creating a 63-seat restaurant with a 38-foot counter on the first floor and a 19-foot bar on the second. His application met with a show of support from members of the community, who bemoaned the current state of the abandoned restaurant, which has become a haven for drug deals and muggings."
Singas Pizza opening on Avenue C
Singas Famous Pizza recently closed on Second Avenue near 11th Street...
...and they've relocated to the renovated storefront on Avenue C and Sixth Street, where they'll compete with Bite Me and Moon Pie...
...and they've relocated to the renovated storefront on Avenue C and Sixth Street, where they'll compete with Bite Me and Moon Pie...
Avenue C's Mr. C's on the block
Speaking of Avenue C, the former Mr C's space between Seventh Street and Sixth Street has been for lease for several months now...the Italian trattoria closed in October after just five months in business...
...and everything remains inside (dishes, glasses, daily specials on the chalkboard, etc.) as if the workers just disappeared...
...and everything remains inside (dishes, glasses, daily specials on the chalkboard, etc.) as if the workers just disappeared...
Another Grimace sighting in the East Village
A few weeks back Jeremiah noted the presence of Grimace out front of McDonald's at First Avenue...(Bob Arihood also got a nice shot of the mascot...)
[Photo via JVNY]
And then, the other night in the restroom (the one on the left) at Mars Bar...
Which reminds me that I heard a good Mars Bar restroom story the other day. Just need to remember the details...
[Photo via JVNY]
And then, the other night in the restroom (the one on the left) at Mars Bar...
Which reminds me that I heard a good Mars Bar restroom story the other day. Just need to remember the details...
Sunday, December 27, 2009
A view toward the Williamsburg Bridge circa 1913
Was poking around Shorpy.com when I found this photo... Summer 1913. "Bird's eye view of N.Y.C. from roof of Consolidated Gas Building." George Grantham Bain Collection.
It's looking to the south east... if you click on the image, then you can see some familar landmarks...such as Tompkins Square Park and the two old steeples at St. Brigid's...I keep staring at it and finding something different...
It's looking to the south east... if you click on the image, then you can see some familar landmarks...such as Tompkins Square Park and the two old steeples at St. Brigid's...I keep staring at it and finding something different...
But how will we know what reality show to watch or strip club to hit?
As the Times reports:
[F]or the month of January, Show Media, a Las Vegas company that owns about half the cones adorning New York City’s taxis, has decided to give commerce a rest. Instead, roughly 500 cabs will display a different kind of message: artworks by Shirin Neshat, Alex Katz and Yoko Ono.
The project is costing Show Media about $100,000 in lost revenue, but John Amato, one of Show’s owners and a contemporary-art fan, said: “I thought it was time to take a step back. January’s a slow month. I could have cut my rates but instead I decided to hit the mute button and give something back to the city.”
Uh, gee, thanks?
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Santacar back in the East Village on Christmas night
After delivering presents to the eligible 378 million* children in the world (roughly 91.8 million homes), Santa was back driving around in the East Village last night in his Santacar. He looks surprisingly refreshed and clean for having climbed down 91.8 million chimneys.
Thanks to EV Grieve reader Cheryl for this Santacar photo....
* estimated
Bring out your dead...trees
It appears some folks are getting a headstart on the city's annual MulchFest, which usually happens the second weekend of the new year... Late yesterday afternoon, a pile of abandoned Christmas trees appeared in Tompkins Square Park...
Though, on closer inspection (yes, I actually inspected them, kind of), the trees appear to be the leftovers from the lot on Second Avenue and 10th Street...
Though, on closer inspection (yes, I actually inspected them, kind of), the trees appear to be the leftovers from the lot on Second Avenue and 10th Street...
Things that were closed on Christmas
Friday, December 25, 2009
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Christmas Eve blockbusters -- Cooper Square Hotel in default on $52 million in loans: report
The Real Deal has the blockbuster:
A German bank claims the developers of the year-old sleek 21-story Cooper Square Hotel in the East Village are in default on $52 million in loans, at the same time the building owes millions to contractors.
Not only is the project in financial distress, but developers and investors in the 145-room hotel at 25 Cooper Square at East 5th Street could owe as much as $6 million in personal guarantees, the recent lawsuit says.
Commercial lender WestLB filed to foreclose on $52 million in loans given to Cooper Square Hotel, Cooper Square Mezz Lender and seven individuals including the hotel's co-developer Matthew Moss and real estate investor Kyle Ransford, a lawsuit filed Dec. 14 in New York State Supreme Court says.
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