Monday, August 19, 2013

[Updated] The Joe Strummer mural is gone


[Bobby Williams]


[Via an EVG reader]

The iconic Joe Strummer mural that has graced the side of Niagara on East Seventh Street and Avenue A since the spring of 2003 is gone. Workers renovating 132 E. Seventh St. blasted the mural into oblivion today.

Graffiti artists Zephyr and Dr. Revolt created the mural several months after the Clash singer's untimely death in late 2002.



The mural originally looked like this...


Dr. Revolt updated the mural in February 2009...


Lately, Joe wasn't looking so good. And workers told residents that they'd have to wipe out the mural while restoring the building...



Still.

Here's my last photo of it from Saturday night...



I've heard that the folks at Niagara plan to have Dr. Revolt recreate the mural as it originally looked, though there hasn't been any official confirmation of that.

Updated:
A mural will return.

RIP.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Joe Strummer gets a splash of Niagara

Joe Strummer gets a new look, skyline

[Updated] Joe Strummer would have been 60 today

Last sign of the cross at Mary Help of Christians



EVG reader S. Wylie took this sequence of photos as the workers lowered the second dome/cross from Mary Help of Christians on East 12th Street this morning...









Morning sky

[Second Avenue via peter radley]

[East 7th Street via EVG]

Gut renovation at the former 9th St. Bakery


Renovations are underway at the former 9th St. Bakery, which closed June 9 after 87 years in business. Workers have removed the awning and gutted the interior. No official word on what's taking the space. Bakery owner Oleg Kucherenko had said that a juice/smoothie place was going to be the next tenant.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Reader report: 9th St. Bakery is closing after 87 years

Pride and Joy's unpaid electric bill


News came down last week that celebrity chef Myron Mixon was leaving the BBQ restaurant that bears his name... in the subsequent lawsuit, Mixon is accusing his partners of trademark infringement, breach of contract, and misappropriation of name and likeness, among other things.

All this has thrown into doubt the future of Pride and Joy BBQ in the former Lucky Cheng's on First Avenue... while matters are still being sorted out, someone from the group may want to pay ConEd — a notice on Pride and Joy's front door shows that they have an unpaid bill of $4,900.


Previously on EV Grieve:
Myron Mixon's Pride & Joy BBQ now in the works for the former Lucky Cheng's space

Myron Mixon lawsuit puts opening of Pride and Joy BBQ in question at former Lucky Cheng's space

Pride & Joy BBQ update; and one idea for Dolly Parton drag queens and bathtub moonshine

A good Block



As you may have noticed, Block's Vision care is now open adjacent to Block Drug Stores on Second Avenue and East Sixth Street... a welcome sight (heh) in an increasingly chain/franchise-filled city... The shop takes over the space previously held by Jack's Luxury Oyster Bar.

Affaire has closed on Avenue B



Several tipsters have pointed out that Affaire recently closed on Avenue B... Calls to the restaurant go unanswered — the number is no longer in service. However, an employee confirmed the closure to a reader, noting that management was not sure if they would reopen a new concept in the space.

Most recently the French bistro and lounge had only been open on Friday and Saturday... and they had curtailed food service for the summer...



Affaire took over the China 1 space in December 2010.

Portals come and go on Avenue A

On Saturday night, The Free Art Society celebrated the arrival of Portal No. 6 in Tompkins Square Park...



... a ceremony that included various dancing sirens and pirates...





... the group headed over to 100 Avenue A between East Sixth Street and East Seventh Street for the official unveiling...









[Thanks to Jim Flynn for the above photos. Find more of his work here.]

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[Bobby Williams]

Earlier on Saturday, co-creators Nicolina and Pérola Bonfanti passed along word that someone removed/stole Portal No. 5 that they unveiled the previous week along 100 Avenue A ... (Every Saturday this summer, the pair will unveil a new portal. Participants have an opportunity to find one of 64 keys that gives them access to a final event on Oct. 5 that will reveal what the whole puzzle means.)

However, later that afternoon, Nicolina and company replaced Portal No. 5... (Boxcutter Design on Avenue C is helping out by printing replacements.)

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Now, as of yesterday, both Portals are missing from Avenue A ... the latest theft/removal of a portal...



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GammaBlog has more photos and video from Saturday evening.

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Check out the 13 Portals website for more info. Read more about Nicolina here.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Week in Grieview


[First the lights, then the sheets]

Stealing a bike on East 13th Street (Tuesday)

Watch the Birdman of the East Village (Monday)

Long-stalled lot on East 8th Street will yield 9-story residential building (Thursday)

Out and About with Richard "Handsome Dick" Manitoba (Wednesday)

Update on injured East Village Farm and Grocery florist (Friday)

Opening of Pride and Joy BBQ in doubt (Monday)

Dolly Parton drag queens and bathtub moonshine? (Tuesday)

RIP Tim Hortons (Friday)

Lyric Diner replacement closes (Thursday)

RIP Nestor? (Wednesday)

The going rate for St. Mark's and Second Avenue (Tuesday)

Archie and Sons has opened (Monday)

Cronut™ delivery service (Monday)

What's rising at 227 E. 7th St. (Wednesday)

It didn't rain on the movie Thursday night (Thursday)

Docking station blues (Friday, 41 comments)

What's in store for 212 E. 14th St. (Tuesday)

Closure on the East 2nd Street laundromat saga (Monday)

New no-frills Citi Bike docking station arrives on East 11th Street



Here's one way to solve that Citi Bike docking station overcrowding problem — just open your own! EVG reader JSS shared these photos from this morning on East 11th Street between Avenue B and Avenue C...



Reader Chris M. notes that the three bikes are actually locked up together...





Says Chris: "Not sure what happened but my guess is that the riders couldn't find an empty docking station, gave up, and took the bikes home."

Meanwhile, we're still calculating the overtime fees...

Today in photos of people dressed like Santa Claus on East 13th Street



At Second Avenue. Lousy photo, but I was afraid to get any closer ... in fear of being trapped into a pub crawl.

Morning rush



At the Tompkins Square pool.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

A heartbreaking last look at the Mary Help of Christians bell tower





A starling takes a look last at the eastern bell tower on the Mary Help of Christians Catholic church.

Because it's coming down right now...



Workers removed the western bell tower on Wednesday. The lot is being cleared to make way for a new housing development.

Photos via an East Village resident.

Previously.

Report: City taking different approach to leasing space on public housing property

City officials have apparently rethought plans to lease space on public housing property for luxury development, the Times reports today.

In February, New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) revealed plans to lease playground and community center space for luxury high-rises ... an announcement that brought about immediate criticism from residents and politicos alike.

Yesterday, NYCHA officials announced that "instead of requesting formal proposals to build on the grounds of eight housing projects in Manhattan, as previously envisioned, they would first solicit ideas from private developers — so-called expressions of interest — before choosing any construction projects."

Also!

"Officials are now encouraging proposals that would incorporate retail stores, community facilities and other uses on the ground floors, which many public housing residents favor."

The NYCHA originally said that the new development would generate $31 million to $46 million in annual lease payments, "all of which will go toward fixing up deteriorating buildings. The agency currently has a backlog of 420,000 repair orders and faces a $60 million budget gap annually," the Daily News reported in February.

Perhaps those trees adjacent to the Max Meltzer Tower will be safe after all.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Outrage over proposal to turn the green space at the Meltzer Tower into private development (35 comments)

Tompkins Square Park, 8:01 a.m., Aug. 17

No more corny Summer Streets headlines until next summer, probably



Today is, sadly or not, the last Summer Smurf Streets Saturday (SSS!) ... your last chance to enjoy a car-free Fourth Avenue (among other streets) ...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Takin' it to the streets like the Doobie Brothers

Summer loving had me a blast, Summer loving happened so fast

Friday, August 16, 2013

Modern Love



And now, the Modern Lovers with "She Cracked" ... from the band's first record in 1976, though Jonathan Richman wrote the song in 1972... not sure exactly when the video was filmed...

Occupy the Empty Space's Benefit for MoRUS tonight



Meant to post this a lot sooner... in case you're around tonight...

BENEFIT PERFORMANCE FOR MoRUS (Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space)
Occupy the Empty Space: Public Space is a Human Right

WHEN:
Friday, August 16 8-10 PM

WHERE:
Gallery Space CICNN151 (151 Avenue C) adjacent to MoRUS

WHAT:
Occupy the Empty Space is proud to produce its first benefit performance for MoRUS, the Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space. We look forward to seeing you at Occupy the Empty Space: Public Space is a Human Right, on Friday, August 16, 2013, for an exciting lineup of plays, performance art, live music, and teach-ins from MoRUS Staff and Friends, celebrating the vital and creative community of MoRUS and public space advocacy!

Heres the Facebook event page with more details and a list of the performers.

No pearly gates



The demolition continues behind the fence on the Mary Help of Christians lot on Avenue A...



Photos today by EVG reader pbc3.

Previously.

Remembering Merlin on Avenue A


[Today]

We posted the following item in August 2010 ... Every year since Merlin (Paul Robert Hogan) died on Aug. 16, 1996, someone creates a memorial for him on Avenue A at Sixth Street where he lived for eight years on the sidewalk.

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I wanted to follow-up on the Merlin's Memorial post from yesterday...



Bob Arihood, who took the shot above, documented the scene on Avenue A and Sixth Street on Neither More Nor Less after Merlin passed away on Aug. 16, 1996...



As Bob wrote:

A wake and vigil of considerable moment, lasting for the better part of 2 weeks , was held in the neighborhood at Merlin's corner . Some nights the sidewalk and street around the memorial were so densely packed with people that it seemed that everyone in the neighborhood and the surrounding communities was attending , crowded together ,all kinds of folks , from all professions and callings , from high and low paying their respects to Merlin .

Here's Merlin on his corner as many people here remember him...



Per the Times from July 1996:

There are few certainties in this changeable city. But on Avenue A and Sixth Street, a place that has been convulsed by change in recent years, one thing has remained constant through the riots and real-estate booms: Merlin, a 41-year-old homeless man who uses only one name, has made the intersection's southeast corner his residence for eight years. Neither blizzards nor blistering heat have routed him from atop a set of wooden pallets in front of a Con Edison substation.

"People move in and out of the neighborhood, but I never budge," he said last week, lounging beneath a pair of tattered umbrellas, his only guard against the sting of the sun. A stroke has left him partly paralyzed, and frostbite cost him several toes three winters ago.

To strangers, he is but another intrusion on the East Village's gritty streetscape, a reason to avert their eyes. But to many local residents, he is a cherished asset: a timekeeper, a message center, a town crier and a source of good, solid conversation. "Merlin is a social hub," said Tatiana Bliss, 25, a local artist. "If you're looking for someone, Merlin probably knows where they are. If you want to leave something for a friend, he'll make sure they get it. He makes this crazy city feel like a small town."

Jeremiah also writes about Merlin today, asking the following: "Could such a memorial happen for a homeless man in the East Village today?"