Tuesday, October 2, 2012

EV Grieve Eatery Etc.: Taureau owner bringing new concept to East Seventh St.; Local 269 looks done


A few weeks ago, we noted that Taureau, the BYOB fondue place at 127 E. Seventh St., moved away from the East Village. The eatery relocated to 558 Broome St. Meanwhile, workers have been sanding the floors and painting the exterior and what not.

Now our friends at the Big Gay Ice Cream Shop a few storefronts away report that a familiar face is returning... the owner of Taureau, Didier Pawlicki, will open another French bistro in the space... and he hopes to have it up and running soon.

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[Last month]

Unfortunately, it looks like the end of Local 269, the live music venue on East Houston and Suffolk. A flood apparently KO'd their sound system. Per a reader: "Recently they were having a hard time making ends meet and paying their bills/liquor distributors and I once [saw] the manager carting in cases of beer from a local bodega."

And now, a "To be Determined" applicant is on the CB3/SLA October docket.

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And at the incoming Entrez on Second Avenue ... we won't have to worry about dueling phone numbers: Blue Glass notes that workers have painted the awning black... Meanwhile, they open in the next few days...

Report: Mendez office to crack down on crusties

[East 11th Street last summer]

In his current column in The Villager, Scoopy reports that City Councilmember Rosie Mendez is planning to crack down on the crusties. A report that Mendez's office recently issued to Community Board 2 last week said that she is aware of the complaints about the seasonal transient population, and is working with outreach teams to help get them off the street.

Per the report, as quoted by Scoopy: "The challenge in removing them is that people have the right to refuse services and to live in the street. Rosie is researching the laws that protect such transients with the intent of tightening up loopholes, so that in the future, these individuals will not have the opportunity to take over the sidewalks in the East Village and Lower East Side and thereby reduce the quality of life of residents."

We asked Mendez's copy of the report, but did not receive any response.

Lease a (soon to be former) Duane Reade

In May, a reader told us that the Duane Reade on 14th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue would be moving into the former HSBC bank space (right next to the CVS) on First Avenue... just north of East 14th Street...

As the Grievestrator shows, the move would look something like this...


And now a reader points us to the new listing (PDF) for the soon-to-be-former Duane Reade space...


That's a lot of space, which may be too much for our used mixed cassette tape/zine shop. Or our Egg Store.

The last time a big chunk of retail like this was available on East 14th Street, the space became an IHOP.

A few things... the retail listing only mentions the nearby chains-franchises... and one of them, the AT&T store the next block to the west, recently closed...


As for the new Duane Reade on First Avenue, you likely will have to wait... the interior is still a major construction zone...

Monday, October 1, 2012

TV show love outside Vazac's


"Golden Boy" cast members Theo James and Bonnie Somerville (yes, we looked it up) on Seventh Street and Avenue B today. The incoming CBS NYPD-related drama about the two best looking detectives in history filmed all over the place today... or so it seemed.

Photo by Bobby Williams.

First Avenue Pierogi & Deli is back open

A reader lets us know that EVG favorite First Avenue Pierogi & Deli is back open after a vacation-remodeling combo on First Avenue near St. Mark's Place. They closed in August, and we saw bits-and-pieces of the new paint and tile coming to the interior... as well as the new awning outside. The apologetic reader didn't go inside, though, because she was carrying a lot of bags. So we'll get a report on the new-look space some other time.

First look at Lehane's Tavern on Seventh Street and Avenue B

A new TV crime drama titled "Golden Boy" is filming around the neighborhood today ... including scenes at Vazac's, the old-reliable location for TV and movie locations...

Looks like the fake bar sign for the shoot reads "Lehane's Tavern." (I don't recall seeing that name on the upcoming CB3/SLA docket. Haha.)



Photos by Bobby Williams.

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition

[Bobby Williams]

RIP Neil Smith, CUNY prof and expert in urban gentrification (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

More on Pathmark's closure on the LES (The Lo-Down)

Sol Moscot leaving longtime LES HQ (BoweryBoogie)

The 'House of Death' on West 10th Street (Ephemeral New York)

Revisiting 'Stranger in Paradise' (Flaming Pablum)

Update on the case against Cro-Mags' Harley Flanagan (Brooklyn Vegan)

More about Jeepney, opening soon on First Avenue (Joonbug)

And in case you missed our post from Saturday... Steve's on the Bowery has closed. Reaction in the comments.


And an item from yesterday afternoon, when a reader noted several NYPD officers along Second Avenue between East Fifth Street and East Fourth Street... Per the reader: They were "bending over some guy who kept saying 'Fuck' over and over ..."


Schools making it work while repairs continue at 420 E. 12th St.

This past Tuesday, workers arrived at the Mary Help of Christians parking lot on Avenue A at East 11th Street to repair the eastern wall of the school at 420 E. 12th St. (We had photos here and here.)

According to the Department of Education, the structural defect, discovered Monday, "will require the immediate demolition and subsequent rebuilding of that wall." They expect the demolition work to take "several weeks."

Students from East Side Community High School (grades 6-12) and the Girls Prep Lower East Side Middle School, who share the space at 420 E. 12th St., have been temporarily relocated to other schools.

We didn't have a chance to survey the scope of the project up close until this past weekend... and you can see in the following photos how extensive the work is...






Open Road Park next to the school is closed too, of course... so the skateboarders are also displaced ...



[Bobby Williams]

[Bobby Williams]

Meanwhile, parents of the displaced students are understandably concerned and upset... we spoke with a few parents, who commend East Side Principal Mark Federman for his leadership.

East Side students made it work last week... attending classes in hallways or the gym at PS 19 or holding study sessions at the Neptune on First Avenue...


[Images via @MarkEastSide]

On Monday, students had to leave the building quickly ... with the school sealed up, students don't have access to their supplies. East Side parent Jane Nina Buchanan wondered if any local business could help out with donating school supplies for the students. (Any queries should be directed to school officials via the East Side website.)

Meanwhile, some East Side parents have launched a website titled "No Way to Learn." The site's mission:

The school that we send our children to recently experienced a structural issue concerning the school building ... We don't know when our children will be allowed back into their school and we're not satisfied with how things are being handled in the meantime by the NYC Board of Education. We hope to share some of our stories, as well as essential information for the parents of East Side Community High School students, here.

Dollar Plus store opens below million-dollar condos

As we've noted (here and here), the East Side 99¢ shop was moving from East 14th Street to become the first retail tenant in the Copper Building.

And on Saturday, the Dollar Plus store opened here on Avenue B at East 13th Street ... where a handful of the 17 residences top the $1 million mark, according to Streeteasy.


... and last night, with the new sign above the front door...


Early renderings of the building do not show any discount stores in the retail space...


Finding the right retail tenant in upscale housing must be difficult. For instance, a 7-Eleven opened in the ground floor at 52E4 — the 15 stories of condo on the Bowery and East Fourth Street.

Regardless, the Dollar Plus store is a good one.

Here are your East 10th Street Historic District street signs

[Photo by Bobby Williams]

The Landmarks Preservation Commission OK'd the East 10th Street Historic District for the East Village in January.

And, as the photo shows, the East 10th Street Historic District street signs have arrived between Avenue A and Avenue B.

As you may recall, the Commission had the date for a public hearing on its proposal for the East 10th Street Historic District expedited because developer Ben Shaoul wanted to construct a rooftop addition at 315 E. 10th St. "that could potentially affect the character of the proposed district."

And we all know how that turned out.

Remember The Frenchmen on First Avenue

EVG reader Baby Dave recently told us the sad news that The Frenchmen recently closed on First Avenue. The air conditioning shop near East 19th Street had been in business for as long as anyone can remember.

The Town & Village Blog reported on Sept. 6 that the owner, Bill Koniuk, had to close the store due to some health issues.

Reporter Sabina Mollot noted how the shop was well-known to residents of Stuyvesant Town/Peter Cooper Village for its annual Christmas party for neighborhood kids.

"The party, a decades-long tradition, included free horse carriage rides, live music, toys and a holiday window display that rivaled midtown’s department stores."

Brown paper now covers the shop's windows, but signs of the holiday remain near the Frenchmen's fantastic sign...




Jeremiah had a post about the Frenchmen's sign back in 2010, and the old-time telephone exchange.

Baby Dave shared this about The Frenchmen:

Mr. Koniuk was a very nice guy. His annual Christmas party was a real throwback, and his holiday window display was a treat.

I once went in on a sweltering Saturday needing help. I asked if the shop made air-conditioning house calls on a Saturday. My mother's machine was sort of revving, but not much else. "No, no house calls today, but what kind of machine is it?" "Does it have an electronic keypad on front?" "OK, just press 'filter alert' and 'Energy saver' [or something like that] at the same time. Hold them for about 15-20 seconds." 
And darned if it didn't work. I was practically about to write him a check on the spot, or scurry to the cash machine, and he fixed the problem for free.

In the last few years, it was unclear just how much business the place was doing. I suppose much of the air-conditioning work was done off the premises, but the display of audeo equipment was like a museum: used boom boxes from 1982, maybe a Discman.

And so a little precious bit of a community disappears.

Indeed. No idea what will come here next. But you get an idea of the new local landscape with the recent arrival of this next door ...

[Updated] Mystery applicant (for now) taking over part of the Life Cafe space

[File photo by Bobby Williams]

So far, no one seems to know much about mystery applicant Yardbird LLC, aiming to take over the former Life Cafe space on the corner... (9th Street Espresso is expanding into half of the storefront, as The Villager first reported.)

They are on the October CB3/SLA docket for a wine-beer license under the Renewal with Complaint History heading. (??)

And Yardbird LLC is not to be confused with the Blackbird that opened in August in the former Lakeside Lounge space right next door...

Know anything about the situation here? Please send them our way via the EV Grieve email

Updated 10-2:

We did here from one of the proprietors, and will have an update later...

But it is so tempting

Just admiring some of the artifacts from the Houston Street Corridor Reconstruction ... piles of leftover, unwanted, unused, etc., construction materials and what not along East First Street between Avenue A and First Avenue...

I like this urban junkyard...


So many little nooks and crannies ... and it makes for a great place to take a ...


Oops. Guess not then.


Anyway. Now you know.


DNAinfo reported in May that the $60 million Houston Street Corridor Reconstruction project would not be completed until the summer of 2014. (One year later than planned.) Long time to wait.

EV Grieve Eatery Etc.: Entrez enters the East Village; another Lucky Cheng's soft opening date

Pomodora, the "pizzaria" on Second Avenue between 10th Street and 11th Street, closed for renovations in late August and never reopened. As we noted, a supervisor at the scene told Blue Glass that the space would soon become some kind of "Italian-French fusion" restaurant.

On Saturday, Blue Glass noted that workers put up the new sign — Entrez Bar & Grill ...though it appears that the Pomodora awning remains ...


So we're not sure which number to call...


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San Matteo Panuozzo on St. Mark's Place remains closed... a sign that says they are closed for renovations and will reopen on Tuesday has been in the window for a few weeks...


...and a bad sign: the rent bill is lying on the floor inside the door...


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East Village Thai — recently named one of the best Thai places in NYC by the Daily News — had to close for Saturday night.


Per the sign: No gas.


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According to the Lucky Cheng's Facebook page: "This Friday, October 5th is our soft opening in Times Square. Grand Opening on October 15th."

[EVG file photo]

The East Village location celebrated its 19th anniversary this past weekend.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Moving day

Someone piled leftovers outside Tompkins Square Park on Avenue A...

[Bobby Williams]

... and some people apparently moving on Avenue B saved time by dropping trash bags of items onto the street below...

[Andrew Adam Newman on Ave C]

Activists: Pol who called Lady Gaga a slut for smoking pot must resign

Last week, Staten Island Borough President James Molinaro inexplicably called Lady Gaga a "slut" during a youth anti-drug program, as the Daily News reported. This outburst came after the singer was photographed smoking a joint at her concert in Amsterdam.

Later last week, she revealed that she has struggled for years with bulimia and anorexia, both of which are alleviated by medical marijuana, whose use she has supported.

Tomorrow at noon, longtime activist and medical marijuana proponent Kenneth Toglia and others will rally at the steps of City Hall to call for Molinari's resignation.

Via Facebook, I asked Toglia why he is organizing the rally.

"I am promoting a common sense 'East Coast' perspective on medical marijuana: Lady Gaga recently announced she has struggled with bulimia and anorexia for years, a very brave stance, I believe, and one that shows, well, common sense," Toglia said. "When asked recently about her smoking of pot, she said: 'I want you to know it has totally changed my life and I've really cut down on drinking. It has been a totally spiritual experience for me with my music,' acknowledging something we all know but very few people are brave enough to say: that pot is safer than alcohol."

Plus: "I think the SI Boro Prez calling her a slut is scandalous and sexist."

In late 2000, the NYPD arrested Toglia for running a medical marijuana club at the University of the Streets at East Seventh Street and Avenue A. The authorities later dismissed the charges. (You can read more about his work in this article in the Voice.)

He has been working to help legalize medical marijuana in New York State. In addition, Toglia is offering a free pot-screening service at the University of the Streets on Thursday nights. Per an article from The Villager last month on the screenings, Toglia says that there is a cancer-causing fungus called Aspergillus fumigatu found in a lot of NYC street pot.

As for tomorrow's rally, Toglia is also encouraging attendees to dress up like Lady Gaga.

Here comes 'Golden Boy'


Crews working on a new TV series called "Golden Boy" will be rolling into parts of the neighborhood this evening... we spotted the above sign on Seventh Street and Avenue B ... there are others along parts of Avenue A and B ... and some side streets...

According to IMDB, "Golden Boy" involves "the making of a man that tracks one cop's meteoric rise from officer to detective to police commissioner." The cast includes Al Sapienza, Nicolette Pierini and Theo James.