The Emu(?) was around all day yesterday but disappeared overnight. I’m intrigued by the fact the it started the day with a Santa hat though. pic.twitter.com/gSWPefjPJ5
— Richard Frank (@Thtguyrich) August 21, 2021
Friday, August 20, 2021
Friday's parting DM
Any sightings? 🤔
Updated 8/21
A reader shared this from the @stoopingnyc Stories feed... apparently, the ostrich emu wasn't doing much running in its stuffed state...
Case closed! 🕵️♂️
And another view via @aczar ...
Updated 10:38 a.m. THE PLOT THICKENS!
Pace yourself
Parquet Courts this week announced details about their new album, Sympathy For Life, due out in October. Read more about that here.
The first single from the Brooklyn-based band's forthcoming record is "Walking at a Downtown Pace" ... as seen in the above video.
Rather random Avenue A fruit stand randomly gone
The fruit stand that arrived in mid-April on Avenue A near Sixth Street has apparently packed up and left.
They seemed to operate on an honor system, leaving the stand wrapped in a blue tarp and unattended overnight.
Any comments about their produce?
Today in photos of severed stuffed zebra heads on 5th Avenue and 9th Street
Why it's good to leave the neighborhood every so often! Morning! (And I have no idea how long that has been up there. Hopefully for months!)
Report: Superiority Burger moving into the former Odessa space on Avenue A
Photo yesterday by Stacie Joy
The former Odessa space at 119 Avenue A has a new tenant.
Rob Patronite and Robin Raisfeld at Grub Street report that Superiority Burger has signed a lease for the former diner between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place.
For starters, Brooks Headley, owner of the all-vegetarian quick-serve spot, tells the outlet that he's not changing a thing:
"Odessa has always kinda been my dream space," he says. What's so dreamy about it is that besides being big, it comes completely furnished and ready to go. "It's not old and dusty and gross and needing upgrades," he says. "I find it completely beautiful — the soda counter, the satellite bar, the cash register station. I don't plan to change it at all."
Superiority will be making the short move around the corner from Ninth Street in the months ahead:
Headley says that he'll need to order some new kitchen equipment and anticipates that it will take at least five months — probably more, what with supply-chain issues — until the new Superiority opens its doors. The plan is to launch dinner service first and then open for lunch and breakfast (yes, breakfast!). He will likely surrender the ancillary kitchen space he leases on 9th Street but keep the original store for purposes yet to be determined.
In July 2020, longtime manager Dennis Vassilatos said that Odessa was shutting down after a prolonged slump in business due to the pandemic. (Odessa Restaurant opened in this space in April 1995. The original Odessa, the longtime favorite that dated to the mid-1960s, closed next door in August 2013.)
However, closer to the last day, co-owner Steve Helios told Gothamist that Odessa was only closing temporarily, that the space would be renovated. (The building's landlord is Odessa partner Mike Skulikidis.)
The space has sat untouched since then.
Earlier in the summer, Louis Skibar, whose Toloache Restaurant Group revived the classic UWS diner Old John's Luncheonette, which dates to the 1950s, was said to be eyeing Odessa.
Superiority opened in the East Village in June 2015.
Last weekend for Tea Drunk on 7th Street
After eight years at 123 E. Seventh St. between Avenue A and First Avenue, Tea Drunk is closing up shop.
This is the last weekend.
Per the tea shop's Instagram account:
With our current lease expiring ... August 21-22, will be the last days for Tea Drunk’s East Village location. Please hold that tear; this is not an end but a new beginning. Despite the highly challenging year due to COVID, Tea Drunk quickly pivoted and continued to stay connected with our tea community through our Educational Tea Club and an array of other online endeavors...Tea Drunk will continue on with a variety of collaborations here and elsewhere.
Meanwhile, if you need any fixtures...
Express yourself: A look at the new FedEx space on Houston
As mentioned the other day, the FedEx Office Print & Ship Center is moving into a newly renovated space a few doors away along East Houston between Avenue A and Avenue B.
EVG correspondent Stacie Joy shared these photos yesterday of the FedExers' more modern-looking storefront...
Thursday, August 19, 2021
Thursday's parting shot
On the CB3-SLA docket tonight: Ixta for the former DBGB space on the Bowery
Here's a look at a few of the applications on the agenda:
• Ixta (LLC to be formed by Mike Himani), 299 Bowery (op)
This looks to be tonight's big-ticket item. Restaurateur Akbarali Himani is seeking a full liquor license for Ixta, a Mexican restaurant proposed for the former DBGB space at 299 Bowery between First Street and East Houston (top pic).
According the the public documents on the CB3 website, Ixta would be open Sunday to Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., with hours of 11:30 a.m. to 2 a.m. Thursday through Saturday.
The space in the Avalon Bowery complex is quite large, with a capacity of 194 patrons, who would be treated to "live Mariachi performers."
Himani has been running a variety of restaurants in NYC and Long Island the past 30 years. His current credits include a Chickpea in Penn Station and NISI Mediterranean in Times Square.
Daniel Boulud closed DBGB here in August 2017 after an eight-year run.
• The York, 186 Ave B (op)
Hospitality vets James Hurst and Hayden Tobin are looking to open The York here at 186 Avenue B between 11th Street and 12th Street.
The York would be open daily from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. and serve a menu featuring "American comfort food," per the questionnaire at the CB3 website. The sample menu items include several burgers, sandwiches and brunch entrees.
This address was most recently Very Thai, which had a nearly three-year run until late 2019 ... after taking over from Barbone.
• ACES (Fine Food and Spirits Inc), 197 2nd Ave. (op)
This is a carry-over from the July meeting for the former Black Emperor space between 12th Street and 13th Street.
You can read about it here. The Aces questionnaire is at this link.
Tonight's meeting starts at 6:30 in the CB3 office, 59 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery. There's also a Zoom option via this link.
Spellbound: Spooksvilla + Friends moving to 309 E. 9th St.
Artist-illustrator Shahrzad Ghadjar is moving her gift shop Spooksvilla + Friends to 309 E. Ninth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue. (Right next to Mud!)
Spooksvilla is the name of her brand of "witchy female-focused stoner art." She's been selling her wares, including bath salts, candles and cards, from two storefronts away at No. 305 since earlier this summer.
You can follow along on Instagram.
Meanwhile, the tenant on the other side of the stairs at No. 309, Dejavu Boutique & Tailoring, moved out yesterday after 13 years in business. The shop's UES location remains open.
All photos by StevenWhere are they now? Catching up with Gem Spa's former Zoltar in Bushwick
Archival photo from the vast EVG Zoltar collection
In May 2019, local card-carrying members (hi!) of the Zoltar Fan Club were heartbroken to learn that their favorite Animatronic Fortune Telling Machine had been removed from outside Gem Spa on Second Avenue at St. Mark's Place.
As we learned in June 2019, Zoltar's owner found a new home for his words of wisdom outside OMG Pizza in Bushwick.
And that's the last we heard about the situation... until now.
At the Times, Alex Vadukul has an update on Zoltar ... as well as a conversation with local businessman and arcade owner Carlo Muraco, who seems to have a lock on the NYC Zoltar market.
First, Vadukul speaks with some passersby outside the pizzeria in Bushwick about this Zoltar's past.
"I definitely put a few bucks into that thing when I was drunk," said Patrick Reid, 30. "After skating in Tompkins we'd meet up on St. Marks and pull up to it, maybe hang out a bit in front of it before heading off to the next adventure. He told me once I could walk a path to greatness, but I think he's bad juju.""It's bizarre this remnant of Gem Spa has ended up here in nowhere Bushwick," said Amrit Dhillon, 26. "It's interesting to see how New York eats itself up and spits itself out again, like a living organism."Saddam Alsaidi, 27, who works at the pizzeria, knew of Zoltar's past life across the river. "I know he used to be famous in the East Village," he said. "He was a big deal."
The article also gets into the disagreement that led to Zoltar's Gem Spa ouster... as well as comments from Parul Patel, who had been running the corner shop for her father until the official closing in May 2020.
"I'd only heard he’s out there in Bushwick," Ms. Patel said. "It's nice to know there's a piece of us still out there in the city. Even though he's not in the East Village anymore, he is a real living artifact of Gem Spa."
You can read the article, which includes several links to EVG's deep reservoir of Zoltar posts, right here.
Zoltar first arrived at Gem Spa on Sept. 23, 2012.
Wednesday, August 18, 2021
Wednesday's parting shot
Thanks to Grant Shaffer for the late-night (last night!) view of the East Village...
Late-afternoon mannequin break
As seen on Ninth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue.
They belonged to Dejavu Boutique & Tailoring, which has closed at No. 309 after 13 years in business. The shop's UES location remains open.
Photo by Steven
ICYMI: Proof of vaccination now required for restaurants, bars, theaters and more
As you likely know, starting yesterday, people age 12 and older need to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccination — at least one dose — to dine or drink inside NYC restaurants, cafes, bars ... or go to movie theaters, museums, concert halls, gyms, art galleries and other venues such as bowling alleys and pool halls.
In addition, employees of those businesses must also be vaccinated, "with holdouts facing the possibility of being fired if they refuse," per The Associated Press.
Mayor de Blasio announced the vaccination mandate — aka Key to NYC — two weeks ago as a way to persuade more people to get vaccinated as the Delta variant has prompted a resurgence of the pandemic in some areas. (Since his announcement, the mayors of San Francisco and New Orleans have announced similar mandates, Bloomberg reports.)
According to the city, proof of vaccination may include:
• NYC COVID Safe App
• Excelsior Pass
• CDC Vaccination Card (or photo)
• NYC Vaccination Record
• An official immunization record from outside NYC or the U.S.
Find more details at the city site here.
Businesses have until Sept. 13 to comply with the mandate ... before city agencies will start conducting inspections and issuing fines up to $5,000 for repeat violations.
Gothamist has a nice explainer here. (And yes, if you're dining outside, you can use the restrooms.)
Meanwhile, the Associated Press and the Post both had articles on the complications of the measures, "as restaurant servers, bartenders and ticket agents become the frontline enforcers for vaccination rules."
Patrons who either aren't vaccinated or don't have their proof may dine outdoors at restaurants.
Several East Village restaurants started requiring proof of vaccination earlier this month. The owners of Ruffian, the wine bar at 125 E. Seventh St. between Avenue A and First Avenue, and Kindred, 342 E. Sixth St. just west of First Avenue, suspended indoor dining until further notice. Their outdoor spaces remain in service.
According to city data, 56 percent of all adult New Yorkers have been fully vaccinated; the number is 68 percent in Manhattan — and even higher in the 10002, 10003 and 10009 zip codes.
Rakka Cafe has not been open lately
Some regulars are concerned about Rakka Cafe, which has not been open for the past five weeks here at 81 St. Mark's Place at First Avenue.
There isn't any signage noting a temporary closure on the front door. The quick-serve Middle Eastern restaurant's website is still active ... while the phone goes unanswered.
According to a listing at Loopnet, this space has been on the rental market since August 2020 (with an update last Wednesday).
If this is the end, then they've had a helluva run. The current signage says established in 1978. (The previous signage stated 1982!) The space underwent a renovation and name switcheroo from Cafe Rakka to Rakka Cafe in 2013.
Cafe Rakka's Avenue B outpost closed in late 2013.
Yesterday, we noted that Rakka Cafe's neighbors at 83 St. Mark's Place and 135 First Ave. — Stromboli and Dan & John's Wings — were closed due to a gas issue in the building. We're told that there's a separate line for this address.
H/T Steven!
The expanding and shrinking pedestrian passage on St. Mark's Place at 3rd Avenue
Yesterday's news from 1 St. Mark's Place (Madison Realty Capital moving to foreclose on Real Estate Equities Corp.'s leasehold) prompted another look at the construction barriers along the construction site.
As noted in late June, the pedestrian passageway on the north side of St. Mark's Place at Third Avenue continues to shrink.
At times, the passage is about a foot wide at its most narrow point ...
A few more pics from our summer collection...
The game of barrier accordion should continue for the foreseeable future as the foreclosure proceedings continue with the developer. Who knows when construction may actually start.
As a P.S. ...
Eden spotted a familiar carpet-clad figure on the Third Avenue side of the site on Sunday...
Stuyvesant Deli Grocery debuts on 14th and A
Stuyvesant Deli Grocery opened this week on the southwest corner of 14th Street and Avenue A. (The flower business on the Avenue A side started at the beginning of the summer.)
As noted previously, some of the gang from the old Stuyvesant Market on the southeast corner of 14th Street and Avenue A (RIP May 2010) are behind the counter here.
They've been working at Adam's Deli & Convenience at 416 E. 14th St. closer to First Avenue. (We don't know at this moment when is going to happen to that business.)
The market takes over from Dion Cleaners, which closed in November after 35 years in business.
The market takes over from Dion Cleaners, which closed in November after 35 years in business.
Thanks to Steven for the photos!
Tuesday, August 17, 2021
Kestrel maneuvers to rescue this fledging along Avenue B
Late last week, some residents discovered a kestrel stranded in a storefront on Avenue B between Sixth Street and Seventh Street. She was unable to get too far off the ground. (Thanks to Ali for the above pic!)
Ranger Rob (aka Rob Mastrianni, a Manhattan Ranger supervisor), who has a long history of East Village bird rescues (here and here, among many others), was called to the scene.
"She fledged a bit early and her tail and wing feathers weren't fully grown out," he told me. (He has an Instagram post on it here.)
The young kestrel is now in the capable hands of Bobby and Cathy Horvath at the Long Island-based Wildlife in Need of Rescue and Rehabilitation (WINORR). Once the kestrel has developed her flying skills, Ranger Rob will release the bird back safely into the 6th Street and Avenue B Community Garden.
He said that a kestrel family lives along here ... in fact, he released two fledglings here last year.
Report: Madison Realty Capital moving to foreclose on leasehold for 3 St. Mark's Place
The Real Deal is reporting that Madison Realty Capital is moving to foreclose on Real Estate Equities Corp.'s (REEC) leasehold interest at 3 St. Mark’s Place.
REEC picked up the 99-year leasehold for the corner properties for nearly $150 million in November 2017. The Gabay family had owned the buildings for generations.
Some numbers and background from TRD's report:
Madison has owned the $48 million loan package backed by REEC's East Village property since 2019. The real-estate private equity firm acquired the debt from South Korean financial services firm Hana Financial group, which provided REEC $79.1 million of debt and sold the $48 million portion to Madison Realty Capital.
Madison filed a complaint with the state Supreme Court in Manhattan, alleging that REEC defaulted on the $48 million mortgage, which combines an acquisition loan and construction loans.
An REEC spokesperson said that they "are working on a recapitalization plan and are optimistic that this will be resolved in the near future."
This is the latest drama for the high-profile corner. As previously reported, a 10-story office building has been in the works here at 3 St. Mark's Place at Third Avenue.
This past October, the City Council's Zoning Subcommittee voted down REEC's application seeking to transfer air rights from the landmarked 4 St. Marks Place to the new building across the street.
With the air-rights transfer, REEC would have been allowed to build 8,386 square feet larger than the current zoning allows on the northeast corner.
Regardless of an extra 8,000 square feet, the project's architect, Morris Adjmi, has said a building of a similar height size would be built as of right.
REEC picked up the 99-year leasehold for the corner properties for nearly $150 million in November 2017. The Gabay family had owned the buildings for generations.
The previous buildings here, which included retail tenants such as Korilla BBQ, the Continental and McDonald's, were demolished in the summer of 2019.
Previously on EV Grieve:Gas problem in building has temporarily closed Stromboli and Dan & John's
Stromboli Pizza and Dan & John's Wings have been forced to temporarily close for the past week... signs on the two quick-serve businesses note emergency repairs...We're told that there's a gas-line issue with the building at 83 St. Mark's Place/135 First Ave. The retail tenants are waiting for an update from the landlord. We're told that the gas issue impacts the building's residents as well.
Meanwhile, one neighbor took the opportunity to leave a note on Stromboli's front door reading: "Stay closed. You're [sic] neighbors sleep better without you."
Thanks to Steven for the photos and reporting.
Labels:
ConEd,
Dan & John's,
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gas issue,
Stromboli Pizza
In the midnight hour, East Berlin will start a weekly film series
East Berlin is adding a weekly midnight movie series to its entertainment slate.
To kick things off tomorrow (Aug. 18!) at midnight, East Berlin will screen a 4K version of "2001: A Space Odyssey" here at 169 Avenue A between 10th Street and 11th Street.
There isn't an entrance fee, though there is a two-drink minimum. (And no shouting "I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.")
The music venue and lounge recently rebranded to East Berlin (sibling to Berlin at 25 Avenue A) from Lola.
Monday, August 16, 2021
Like a diversion: Former local resident celebrates a birthday
Madonna was born on this day in 1958. And on this occasion, the Village Preservation repurposed a piece on the pop singer's time in the East Village in the early 1980s. You can read that post here.
Their post mentions that she lived at 230-232 E. Fourth St. We always thought it was 234 E. Fourth St., which is between Avenue A and Avenue B (and next to the entrance for Van Da).
In any event, here she is talking about her old EV place here in the "Madonna Rising" special from 1998 with Rupert Everett...
In the next segment, Madonna and Rupert go to (RIP!) Kate's Joint on 4th and B.
Madonna wheatpaste by The Postman as seen on First Avenue.
The NYPD is collecting donations for earthquake victims in Haiti
Every NYPD precinct in the city is now collecting donations for the residents of Haiti after Saturday's 7.2-magnitude earthquake killed more than 1,300 people.
According to NBC News, the Haiti Civil Protection Agency said that 13,694 homes were destroyed and 13,785 were damaged by the quake.
The NYPD is accepting donations of:
• medical supplies
• personal hygiene items
• non-perishable food
• bottled water
• clothing
Your chance to attend a virtual Rat Academy
Via the EVG inbox... Council Member Carlina Rivera's office and Community Board 3 are sponsoring a free Rat Academy tomorrow from 10 a.m. to noon.
The virtual session will provide training for building supers and staff, residents, community gardeners, managing companies, etc.
You can find the registration form at this link.
Animal collective: Pillow-Cat Books coming to 9th Street
Updated: The shop opened on Sept. 16.
Here's more about the shop via a recent Instagram post:
Pillow-Cat Books is the first animal-focused bookshop in New York ... it is small, green, and filled with used, vintage and antique books in several languages and of all types: art, photography, design, literature, comics, children, etc. The books' only common denominator is that an animal or animal character has to be present.Look for a September opening.
Cure Thrift Shop opening later this month in new space on 3rd Avenue
As we first reported back on May 3, Cure Thrift Shop was moving to the northeast corner of Third Avenue and 12th Street.
The owners have been getting the larger space ready for an opening, which, according to the Cure Instagram account, could happen as soon as Aug. 28.
Cure, the eclectic nonprofit that benefits juvenile diabetes research and advocacy, closed its previous location at 111 E. 12th St. between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue in early July.
As previously reported, Basics Plus was set to close in this storefront — 91 Third Ave. — in the spring of 2019. However, the housewares shop that opened here in August 2014 ended up consolidating the space, and making do with a smaller footprint in the building.
Thanks to Steven for the photos earlier this month!
Good news-bad news about the water-main work on 7th Street and 1st Avenue
Here's some positive news about the roadwork taking place on the west side of First Avenue at Seventh Street in recent months.
A rep for the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) told Community Board 3 late last week that the contractor has completed the water-main installation on the west side of the intersection and between First Avenue and Second Avenue.
Workers have also removed those noisy metal plates and filled in the roadway with temporary asphalt.
So far, so good with the west side of this intersection. However, the contractor is now scheduled to begin similar work on the east side of First Avenue and Seventh Street.
According to the DEP rep, crews will be installing the new water main on the east sidewalk of First Avenue, "about 40 feet (give or take) to the north of the north curb line and 40 feet (give or take) to the south of the south curb line of Seventh Street."
In addition, the project calls for the installation of a water main pipe up to the mid-block on Seventh Street between First Avenue and Avenue A. (The rep said that this will be done without "disturbing" any outdoor dining structures on Seventh Street east of First Avenue.)
"We have also requested the contractor to divide this work into phases," the DEP rep said. "This will minimize the number of road plates on location for the duration of the project."
No word on a timeline for the east side. The repair work on the west side of the intersection began in early May.
As previously reported, there were back-to-back breaks here in late December. The multiple ruptures sent water rushing into businesses and residences along Seventh Street between First Avenue and Avenue A.
The work earlier this summer disrupted the lives of residents and businesses due to the all-consuming noise, both during the day when the work crew was on the scene and after-hours when cars and trucks would pass over the multiple metal plates on the roadway. (Read our posts here and here.)
Our coverage, as well as a follow-up piece in the Post, apparently got the attention of the DEP, who told the paper:
"The ongoing upgrades to the critical infrastructure that serves the East Village must be carried out in a way that respects the residents and businesses in the area and we have directed our contractors to take several steps to ensure that this happens. Inspectors will be following up with regular visits."
Businesses and residents can file service complaints with Community Board 3 via this link.
Sunday, August 15, 2021
Sunday's parting shot
Sunset pic via @cecilscheib...
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