Sunday, May 15, 2016

Letters for Angel



Someone has set this up on the corner of Avenue B and 13th Street... soliciting letters for Angel... (the address is to a box at the 23rd Street post office)...





I don't know Angel, but based on all this I'm assuming he was a piraguero who sold flavored shaved ice here...



Anyone have more information about all this?

'The Devil's Veil' debuts tonight



Longtime East Village resident Anton van Dalen has a new exhibition debuting this evening titled "The Devil’s Veil."

The exhibit will be up through June 19 at Romeo, 90 Ludlow St. (between Delancey and Broome). The opening reception is tonight from 6 to 9. Find more details here.

See the new Jeff Buckley mini-documentary tonight at 2A



Mini-documentary on Jeff Buckley with some musical performances happening tonight upstairs at 2A courtesy of Tom Clark (OAAITEV alum!) ... Doors at 8:30. And there's very limited space.

Find out more about Sunday night events at the Treehouse at 2A here.

Saturday, May 14, 2016

The semi-annual Village View tag sale is tomorrow (Sunday!)



The sale is in the playground just behind 60 Avenue A at the corner of East Fourth Street and Avenue A ... from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Take a look at some photos from last fall's sale here.

Noted



A new Urban Etiquette Sign on East Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B...

Photo by Stacie Joy

Today in free flatscreen TVs



This one's up for grabs on East First Street outside Meltzer Towers Park between First Avenue and Avenue A... Per the note taped to the top of the set, "This one works perfectly!!!"

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!



The 2016 Street Fair/Festival continues today with another Street Fair/Festival on Second Avenue. (Just like last week.)

Unfortunately, as always, we arrived too soon. So browsing was difficult because there was still traffic zipping down the Avenue ...



By the time we strolled a few blocks to the south, though, the barricades went up and the traffic was stopped... affording the opportunity to bike down the middle of the Avenue just like any other day...



We only spotted one food option so far: sweet corn on the cob (Have you ever seen a restaurant with a Sweet Corn on a Cobb Salad?)...





Officially, this is the Two Bridges Neighborhood Council-St. Stephen Our Lady of Scapular Co-Sponsored Fair.

Second Avenue is closed from 14th Street to Sixth Street. The fair runs from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

P.S.

It's fine to bring your pets, but please keep them on a leash so they don't get away...


[Photo further down 2nd Ave. by Vinny & O]

Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen goes on summer hiatus after this weekend



An EVG reader let us know that this is the last weekend for the Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen at 33 E. Seventh St. between Second Avenue and Cooper Square before their customary summer break.

So if you want to load up on their inexpensive stuffed cabbage and pierogis, etc.

The basement cafe, a fundraising arm of the St George Ukrainian Catholic Church up the street, is open (roughly) 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and tomorrow.

Speaking of St. George, the 40th annual Ukrainian Festival is next weekend on this block...



H/T Eddie!

Previously on EV Grieve:
At the Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen

Friday, May 13, 2016

Skylines and sunsets



Sunsetting action this evening looking toward the Christodora House (above) and North Miami Beach Williamsburg (below)...



Photos by Bobby Williams

Puddle people rise up!



Photo today via Grant Shaffer

Monk power



The Brooklyn-based Honey's new LP is out this week... Named WFMU's release of the day yesterday:

"Hawkwindy/Stooge-oid driving/hooky scuzz trio from Brooklyn."

The above video is for the song "Monk."

EV Grieve Etc.: East Village restaurateurs launch collective; Merchant’s House Museum turns 80


[Photo on 2nd Avenue by Derek Berg]

Where New York is gentrifying and where it isn't (City Lab)

At Tompkins Square Park, "the outdoor barometer of homelessness in New York City" (The Awl)

East Village restaurateurs launch Eastville Restaurant Collective (Eater)

Baker's Pizza is an NYC "slice destination" on Avenue A (Gothamist)

Christo gathers a feast for the fam in Tompkins Square Park (Laura Goggin Photography)

More about who knew what and when about the deed lifting at the former Rivington House (The Lo-Down)

The charges against Steve Croman: "lost in all this schadenfreude is the uncomfortable fact that Croman and his son are embodiments of unfortunate stereotypes about Jews" (Tablet)

On-the-lam owner of Pure Food and Wine and One Lucky Duck busted in Tennessee (Gothamist ... Brooklyn Daily Eagle)

Third Street Music School Settlement, "America's longest-running community music school" (NY1)

Alex on the impending loss of Other Music (Flaming Pablum)

Merchant’s House Museum on East Fourth Street turns 80 (Off the Grid)

A look inside Beetle House on East Sixth Street (Grub Street... previously)

At the car wash with Jeremiah Moss! (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Making a network of malls in Midtown — in the 1970s (Ephemeral New York)

... and there's sale tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Dias y Flores Community Garden, 520 E. 13th St. between Avenue and Avenue B...

No, LinkNYC didn't set up a kiosk in Tompkins Square Park



In case someone asks.

Photo this morning via Steven.

[Updated] A pre-rush hour look at 3rd Avenue



In the aftermath of Wednesday evening's loose bricks drama... traffic has opened up on the streets surrounding 115 E. Ninth St. ... one lane anyway on Third Avenue between Ninth Street and 10th Street...



And here's a look at the facade situation...



A DOB spokesperson told DNAinfo that they will carry out a partial demolition to rebuild the unstable part of the facade. There isn't any timeline on the repairs.

DOB records show vacate orders on three units — 14C, 15C and 16C.

Updated 2:30

Third Avenue and the surrounding streets are back open...





...and it appears work continues on the facade...



Previously on EV Grieve:
[Updating] Danger of falling bricks on 9th Street and 3rd Avenue

This morning in photo shoots on Avenue A



Near East 11th Street. Photo by Shawn Chittle.

Report: Despite looming shutdown, MTA plans to start expanding the 1st Avenue L stop


[Photo via EVG reader Michael]

The MTA has now held two meetings for people to yell at them (as Gothamist put it) about the looming L train shutdown to repair the Sandy-damaged tubes.

The two not-great options are basically: total shutdown for a projected 18 months. Or! A partial shutdown with repair work lasting for three (heh, sure) years.

There has been a lot of coverage about the various scenarios ... concerns from straphangers, residents, business owners... (You can check out some coverage at Curbed ... Gothamist ... The New York Times ... Here's a report from last night's meeting via DNAinfo)

Meanwhile! DNAinfo reports that the MTA will begin construction of new entrances to the First Avenue L train stop next year... However, this could all be a big tease, depending on the option the MTA goes with for the tube repairs. As DNAinfo notes:

[I]f the Manhattan stops along 14th Street shut down along with the Brooklyn-to-Manhattan service as some reports suggest could be a possibility, it could be years before riders can take full advantage of the new stairwells.

And here's the rendering for the Avenue A entrance via the MTA (h/t EVG reader Jeffrey!)...



As we previously noted, the MTA 2015-2019 Capital Plan, which was approved by the MTA Board last October, includes $71.9 million for a new entrance to the overcrowded First Avenue stop ... in part to make the entrances ADA compliant.

After last night's public meeting about the L, MTA officials will next hook up with local community boards for discussion before making a final recommendation possibly later this summer. The main work is set to begin in early 2019.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Is an Avenue A entrance for the L train in our future?

Avenue A L train entrance closer to a reality … some day

City council members talk up new L train entrance coming to Avenue A

Hey, the Funkiberry space will become a pizzeria (again)



Workers have been busy inside the former Funkiberry froyo space on Third Avenue and East 12th Street. This past week, an EVG reader saw workers bringing in "regular, not wood burning, ovens." A worker also told EVG correspondent Steven that the space was to become a pizzeria. Not sure at the moment who the tenant will be.

Probably would have made sense to leave the pizza ovens intact after AAA (New) Amici Pizza got RentHikeitis and closed in July 2013. The corner space had been home to at least two pizzerias before this.

F-berry closed in March 2015 after nine months in business.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Stuff that you can't make up: More FroYo for the East Village

Ghost signage uncovered on Third Avenue and East 12th Street

DOUBLE ghost signage discovered at 88 3rd Ave.

Hey, the Funkiberry sign is up on 3rd Avenue

Hey, Funkiberry is now open on 3rd Avenue

Hey, the Funkiberry space is for lease on 3rd Avenue

Hey, the Funkiberry closed on 3rd Avenue

Report: Eastville Gardens sells for $44 million on 8th and C


[Image via Streeteasy]

L+M Development Partners is the new owner of the Eastville Gardens, the 7-story residential building with an Associated Supermarket in the retail space on Eighth Street and Avenue C.

According to The Real Deal, who first reported on the transaction:

The developer paid $44 million to owner BFC Partners, which finished developing the building at 342 East 8th Street in 2002. The seven-story building, near Avenue C, has a mix of market-rate units and affordable housing. A Baptist church is also on the site, but doesn’t appear to be part of the deal.

The Commercial Observer reported that L+M and BFC swapped Manhattan residential properties as part of a 1031 exchange.

Eastville Gardens is on the site once occupied by El Jardin de la Esperanza.

Here's more on what happened there via The Local/New York Times:

In 1999, community gardeners occupied the site of the Esperanza garden with a giant frog sculpture that doubled as a tree house. Even after the site had been bulldozed, a late-night party descended into chaos as 150 people stormed the lot, clashing with the police and injuring seven officers. Gardeners had previously launched a court case, but the New York Supreme Court ruled the project could go ahead. (In response to a suit filed by then-attorney general Eliot L. Spitzer, another Supreme Court ruling halted all work on other community gardens — the day after the East Village site was bulldozed.)

Donald Capoccia, who operates BFC Partners, is behind the Jupiter 21 residential building at 11-17 Second Ave. ... as well as part of the venture developing Essex Crossing (along with L+M Development).

Not sure what, if anything, this might mean for the Associated. The owners can't seem to get a break. The same owners ran the Associated on West 14th Street that recently had to close due to an exorbitant rent hike ... as well as the Met Foods on Third Avenue and East 17th Street, which closed in April 2015. Principal owner Joseph Falzon and his partners have reportedly been working with Blackstone to come to an agreement for the Stuy Town Associated before their lease expires for that store in 2017.

And what will become of the unused lot between Eastville Gardens and 115 Avenue C? The only activity there the past 14 years has been someone cutting back the weeds.


[Photo from November]

A crawfish boil at the Parkside tomorrow (Saturday!)



The Parkside Lounge is having an all-you-can-eat crawfish boil tomorrow afternoon (details below) ... and the Parkside had a warm-up for tomorrow's boil back on April 21... EVG contributor Stacie Joy was there...









Here's the info for tomorrow... the boiling starts at 2...



The Parkside is located at 317 East Houston at Attorney. You can email them to make reservations.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Missing you



Just noting a tribute that arrived this week at 190 Bowery (at Spring Street) ... in memory of Prince and David Bowie, with an inscription "You will be missed" ...



The work is by @citykittystreet ...

Meanwhile, the conversion of the historic Germania Bank Building continues. Aby Rosen's RFR Realty owns the building and it's not known exactly what's going to happen to the landmarked building...



Previously

Prepare to meet your maker (or, Hi Christo!)



Christo atop St. Brigid-St. Emeric on Avenue B and Eighth Street today... waiting to pick up dinner for the family...

Photo by Bobby Williams

J.G. Ballard and the Cinema at the Anthology Film Archives

"High-Rise," based on the 1975 novel by J. G. Ballard, opens tomorrow at the Sunshine on East Houston. (Still kinda curious to see how this plays on film. Hey, 66% percent via Rotten Tomatoes!)

Coinciding with this theatrical release, the Anthology Film Archives is presenting a program titled J.G. Ballard and the Cinema:

British author J.G. Ballard is one of the towering figures of 20th-century experimental literature, a writer whose uncompromising, fearless, and sometimes frighteningly penetrating vision of our modern, technological society, and the psychological and erotic dimensions that underlie it, manifested itself in 19 masterful novels and many dozens of short stories. It’s curious that such a profoundly modern writer, and one who was, both in his life and his work, consistently preoccupied with the movies (he lived for 50 years in Shepperton, a stone’s throw from the famous Shepperton Film Studios), has seen so few of his works adapted into film.

As HuffPost put it, "This somewhat loosely structured series features films that have been directly influenced by Ballard, films that Ballard expressed admiration for, and films that just seem Ballardian in theme."

Things kick off tomorrow night with a double dose of David Cronenberg — "Crash" and "Shivers" aka "They Came From Within."

Check out the whole schedule here. (Highlights include a screening Saturday evening of "The Road Warrior," a film Ballard was said to admire.) The Anthology is on Second Avenue at East Second Street.

And check out the trailer for "Crash" (NC-17! The children!)...

In Vino closes for good on East 4th Street after service on Monday


[Image via Facebook]

After 13 years of serving Italian fare on East Fourth Street, In Vino is closing on Monday night.

The rustic restaurant, which opened in 2003, is owned by East Village resident Keith Beavers. (Updated: See the comments with more from Keith.)

A rent increase is not behind the closure — just a financial issue. "Weekday business just hadn't lived up to what it has been in the past," In Vino manager Dana Worstall told us via email.

As In Vino preps to close, starting tonight, wine glass pours will be $5 and bottles will be 50 percent off. In Vino, at 215 E. Fourth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. is open 5-11 p.m. weekdays; until midnight Friday and Saturday.

Report: Trader Joe's a possibility for the Extell Development on 14th Street and Avenue A


[The southeast corner of 14th and A yesterday]

It's possible that you will one day have the choice of two Trader Joe's to stand in line at on East 14th Street.

According to DNAinfo, Trader Joe's is looking at taking the retail space in Extell's incoming retail-residential complex along East 14th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B

“It’s not a totally done deal, but we think that we’re close,” Ari Goldstein, vice president of development at the Extell Development Company, told DNAinfo New York.

If the deal pans out, Trader Joe’s will take over a storefront on the corner of East 14th Street and Avenue A, said Goldstein — in part to help offset the hellish lines at the chain’s most popular city location, sitting just a few blocks way at 142 E. 14th St. near Union Square.

“That is their most profitable store right now, and the line to get in that store … is insane,” said Goldstein. “They’re concerned they’re losing credibility with their customers because they’re not offering a good quality experience. So this would supplement that and pull a lot of traffic away from that store.”

The new location would serve customers in the East Village and Stuyvesant Town who would otherwise have to trek to the Union Square location, Goldstein said.

As we previously noted, a pollster for Fairway was soliciting opinions about the possibility of a new store for East 14th Street and Avenue A back in 2014. (A Fairway to this location isn't happening now.) In March 2014, a Facebook group formed to advocate for a Trader Joe's at Ben Shaoul's condotopia at 100 Avenue A. (Sorry — you got a Blink instead.)

As DNAinfo's Allegra Hobbs reported, Goldstein dropped this TJ tidbit for 500 E. 14th St. during CB3's Transportation & Public Safety/Environment Committee meeting Tuesday. The topic was about a request for loading zones for the development's commercial tenants. CB3 would need to OK all this before TJ would apparently commit to the location.

This grocery talk comes at a time when the owners of the Associated on East 14th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue are attempting to have their lease renewed.

Even if TJs signs up for this location at 500 E. 14th St., you'll likely still have awhile before shopping for, say, bags of Ode to the Classic Potato Chip here. The development appears to have a ways to go before it's ready for action. Workers are still filling in the foundation.

In total some day, the two 7-story complexes — 500 E. 14th St. at Avenue A and 524 E. 14th St. — will house more than 150 units, 32 of which will be below-market-rate.

Previously on EV Grieve:
The disappearing storefronts of East 14th Street

[Updated with correction] 8-lot parcel of East 14th Street primed for new development

New 7-floor buildings for East 14th Street include 150 residential units

1st activity at 500 E. 14th St. since the demolition phase, and when the standing water froze

Community meeting tonight to address construction noise at Extell's East 14th Street development sites

So much for that Fairway coming to East 14th Street and Avenue A then

Construction watch: 500 E. 14th St. (plus, Extell construction site still keeping residents up at night)

Construction enters awesome pile-driving phase at 438 E. 14th St.



While we're on East 14th Street... just noting that the pile drivers recently arrived for the start of the foundation work here just west of Avenue A...



There two for double the pile driving...



Anyway, as you likely know, plans call for an 8-story retail-residential building featuring 114 units, with 20 percent designated as affordable housing.

And here's another look at the renderings on the plywood along the former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office...





If a Trader Joe's does sign up for the southeast corner of 14th Street and Avenue A, then do you think they'd be a need for a market as depicted in the above rendering?

Previously