Friday, November 5, 2010

How Dunkin' Donuts could ruin your morning



Sausage pancake bites at Dunkin' Donuts, photographed on Sixth Street and First Avenue.

The Ninth Street Bread N Cake Bakery was great until they applied for a liquor license

Thanks to Goggla's comment the other day, we've all been spending far too much time looking at photos from the New York Public Library archives ... EV Grieve reader Pinhead came across this shot..

It's taken from the old Cooper Union building, looking at Stuyvesant Street to the east toward St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, 1856.



As Pinhead says: "Be sure to zoom the amazing detail, like the Ninth Street Bread N Cake Bakery at 172 E 9th (an address that doesn't exist anymore because of the NYU dorm)."

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Reader report: Attempted ATM holdup on Avenue A doesn't go so well for would-be thief

A reader notes that there was an attempted robbery last evening (some time around 8:30 p.m. or so) at the Chase branch on Avenue A at Second Street. As the story goes, a woman, the intended victim, "beat the shit out of the guy and he left on a stretcher in handcuffs." There was also a very strong police response.

Anyone else have any information?

Speaking of Chase...



Goggla took this shot at the Chase branch on the Bowery and First Street.

Not sure just yet if he was:

1) going to a Halloween party
2) reporting to work at Chase
3 heading to Peels

New owner of the former Aces and Eights space speaks out; "the beer pong is gone"


There's an excellent piece this afternoon on The Lo-Down by Jennifer Strom that delves into the behind-the-scenes legal wrangling that eventually shuttered Aces and Eights at 34 Avenue A.

Here are two excerpts with her interview with owner Jevan Damadian:

After a career in his family’s successful chain of MRI centers, where he remains a regional director, Damadian came into some cash when the family sold its centers to a large health corporation. Seeing the stock market falling, he looked around for alternative investment opportunities. He lives on the Upper East Side, upstairs from the original Aces and Eights at First Avenue and East 87th Street, and had watched it grow into a successful bar under the leadership of owner Solomon Eljashev. The two men had become friendly, and eventually struck a deal for Eljashev to open the East Village branch with Damadian’s money.


And!

If he is able to reopen the bar, Damadian says, he would like to establish an upscale tapas lounge in the upstairs space, where business people can meet quietly. The downstairs space, which garnered a reputation as a rambunctious “frathole” during its tenure, is still home to a pool table, but Damadian would like the bar’s critics to know one thing: “The beer pong is gone,” he says.


Read the whole post here.

You can meet Jevan yourself on Wednesday night.

[Photo via The Lo-Down]

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning edition



Sports bar to replace Ruby's on the Coney Island boardwalk (Amusing the Zillion)

No end to the influx of suburbia (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)

A discussion on community preservation (Save the Lower East Side!)

Looking at the Payless ShoeSource LES collection (BoweryBoogie)

Union Square market offering booths from Momofuku Milk Bar, among others, this season (Eater)

No "Glory" on the subway for Han Solo (Stupefaction)

Apartment immoralized memorialized by NYU-hating, fruit-tossing Jude Law on the market (Curbed)

Something for EV Heave: The $3.99 Lobster Roll at Song 7.2 (Grub Street)

Opening reception tonight for the I Hate Hating exhibit at the Michael Mut Gallery on Avenue C near Seventh Street.

Cooper 35 Asian Pub part of development deal on Cooper Square



After seeing yesterday's news on the sale of the empty lot on Cooper Square at Sixth Street for $8.5 million ... I wondered if this meant the end of 35 Cooper Square too — currently the home of Cooper 35 Asian Pub. (Read the history of 35 Cooper here.) The parcel of land in question is 35-39 Cooper Square. I asked Massey Knakal if the sale included the space that houses the bar, which is adjacent to the Cooper Square Hotel. A Massey Knakal spokesperson confirmed that it does.

Here are a few details from the news release on the sale (PDF):

We generated over 30 offers in under 45 days,” said First Vice President of Sales, Joe Sitt who exclusively handled this transaction with the assistance of Massey Knakal’s Special Asset Strategy Group. “The buyer is a known and respected developer who performed as expected on a two week T.O.E. close. It just goes to show there is always strong demand when locations are prime,” added Sitt.


[Photo via Massey Knakal]

Blue cheese?


The "underground," secret grilled-cheese delivery guy has retired:

Ronnie," the out-of-work Wall Street banker who last summer started grilling the sandwiches in his East Village apartment and selling them on street corners, parlayed the health-code-violating gig into a real restaurant job.
"It was nice being an outlaw for a while," the secretive cheeseslinger told The Post. "But starting Monday, I will be the manager of a high-end American restaurant in Midtown."


Outlaw? Maybe if he had been delivering another kind of cheese...

New owner of the Aces and Eights space wants to "meet the approval of the community"

The former Aces and Eights is on the CB3/SLA docket for November's meeting...

And the new owner of the space, Jevan Damadian, is hoping to reach out to the neighborhood... You can meet with him at 34 Avenue A next Wednesday evening...



He's off to a promising start by seeking feedback from neighbors...

[Thanks to EV Grieve reader RyanAvenueA for the photo]

Why there wasn't a protest in Tompkins Square Park on Halloween



As we had reported, John Penley had organized a protest/fiesta Halloween night in Tompkins Square. The event was set to last from 7 p.m. to midnight or so... I didn't make it to the Park until 10 p.m. No one was there. I was told only a handful of people turned out. Penley wasn't there.

He offered an explanation via Facebook: "Some pretty heavy stuff came down on me the night before Halloween. I got maced and someone else close to me got a baseball bat to the face. I have gone into hiding for awhile. This is why I was not at TSP on Halloween."

Penley did say that filmmaker Vlad Teichberg was there at midnight for a “culture jam” projection. There should be a video soon.

While the protest didn't materialize, I thought there was a healthy discussion about concerts in Tompkins Square Park, a permanent bandshell ... and local politicians ... all leading up to Halloween. (Read the 74 comments here.)

Previous John Penley protest coverage on EV Grieve:

At the Donut Social

At the 47 E. 3rd St. Protest

At the Bowery Wine Co. protest

More on 35 Cooper Square

Just a quick follow-up on our post yesterday about the sale of 35-39 Cooper Square...

First, Goggla passed along this photo from 1909 of Copper Square between Seventh Street and Sixth Street from the New York Public Library database .... on the right, you can make out just a little bit of the building that was on the now-vacant corner...



Also, in July 2008, Jeremiah presented a thorough history of 35 Cooper Square... Here's just a portion of the building's history:

"In the 20th century, it became a home for artists. Painter and photographer J. Forrest Vey lived there after WWII. He rented the upstairs dormer rooms for $5 apiece to people like Joel Grey, star of Cabaret, and Claude Brown, author of Manchild in the Promised Land.

Mr. Vey once broke into the attic, which had been sealed ever since a man hanged himself there. He found Civil War newspapers, a stove-pipe hat, a sign that said '5-cent Hot Whiskey,' and a noose."


Appreciate 35 Cooper Square while you can... soon, it will be swallowed up by more glass and steel.

More on the new First Avenue Papa John's, sort of


[Top photo by First Avenue correspondent Blue Glass]

As I exclusively reported last night.... Papa John's is now open on First Avenue...



I went looking for more info on the opening... like something official from the Papa Johnsters... I did come across this article from last month on PizzaMarketplace.com:

Papa John's to open in crowded East Village space

Popular New York blog EV Grieve [Editor's note: Woo!] has reported that a Papa John's storefront has appeared on First Avenue in an area of New York City's East Village that's especially pizza-dense. Back in March, the blog reported several pizza restaurants — such asLuzzo's, Motorino, Piola, Tonda, and more — having recently opened.

With all the local pizza concentration, Papa John’s may be looking to appeal to tourists looking for something recognizable in the famous New York enclave. Papa John’s spokesperson Tish Muldoon said the company sees the location as "a great growth opportunity for the brand in Manhattan." However, anecdotal commentary on the new storefront did not appear favorable toward the No. 3 pizza chain.


Meanwhile, no word if this is how pizzas will be delivered hereabouts:



Previous coverage here.

On second thought: DOB 111 back open last night



The eatery on St. Mark's Place apparently just took a few nights off... You can't blame us for thinking that Michael "Bao" Huynh's French-Vietnamese place may be closed... As Fork in the Road noted last summer, DOB 111 and Bia Garden were on the market... Per Fork in the Road, Huynh, through his publicist, denied any plans to close the eateries... Bia Garden on Orchard closed last month, as BoweryBoogie reported....Huynh is reopening it as Chinito, a beer garden and taqueria. The space is still on the market, though, BB noted.