Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Report: The Streit’s Matzo Factory is closing, leaving the Lower East Side



Some sad but not surprising news coming out of the Lower East Side this morning. BoweryBoogie has an exclusive that the Streit's Matzo Factory, which has anchored the corner of Rivington and Suffolk since 1925, is in contract, and will close at the conclusion of this year's Passover baking season.

The fifth-generation family members broke the news to employees yesterday.

The dispatch comes via filmmaker Michael Levine, who has spent a better part of two years at the factory for his upcoming documentary, "Streit’s Matzo and the American Dream."

Per Levine at BoweryBoogie:

I personally know that this was an agonizing decision for the Streit family, who despite their many challenges, were determined to keep the factory and its workers employed onsite, even as the phone rang daily with offers from developers clamoring to purchase the valuable real estate. I watched as they turned down offer after offer, until the challenges of maintaining a manufacturing business in a drastically changing Lower East Side, as well as the pressures of increased foreign competition, left the company no alternative but to accept.

News of a possible sale surfaced back in December 2007, when Curbed reported that the space hit the market for $25 million.

As Curbed noted at the time:

The matzo business itself is moving, and the 104' x 100' lot is free to be converted or (ack!) torn down by whatever developer is lucky enough to snag it ... from what we hear, conversion will be very difficult due to the state of the 47,500-square-foot building's interior. With a "community facility bonus," a new structure could be built up to 67,600 square feet.

There's no word just yet on who the new owner is (Ben Shaoul is always a good guess).

As for Streit's, the family hopes to "find a new home for the factory and as many of their workers as possible, though no site has been chosen."

Read the whole BoweryBoogie post here.

Ricky hopes for a reunion with Pookie


[Photo by Sally Davies]

EVG regular Moe shares this story about Ricky, a familiar face in the neighborhood...

Until 2 weeks ago, Ricky was always accompanied by a cute little wiry-haired terrier chihuahua mix named Pookie who has a very nice disposition.

Turns out his dog was stolen 2 weeks ago when he left it tied up for a minute — yes, I know — outside the Ottendorfer Library on Second Avenue near St. Mark's Place to go inside for a book.

A witness said that it was a "junky-looking blond woman with hair pushed up in the middle of her head" who took it.

Turns out this woman is currently in jail on some other charges, and that she allegedly was also responsible for five other recent dog thefts.

She has some sort of arraignment today [Jan. 6] at which time Ricky and a lawyer who has helped him before will be present to see if, at the least, information about the current whereabouts of these stolen dogs can be obtained.

As Stanley L. Cohen heads to prison

Controversial East Village-based attorney Stanley L. Cohen heads to Pennsylvania today for an 18-month stint behind bars for obstructing and impeding the Internal Revenue Service.

The Forward files a feature on Cohen, including some details on his government-supported trip last October to Kuwait and Jordan to help negotiate for the release of American aid worker Peter Kassig with jihadists close to ISIS. (ISIS beheaded Kassig on Nov. 16.)

According to Cohen, the failure of his mission was in part due to the U.S. government’s failure to act when his initiative was aborted midstream, just as the talks were showing promise.

Cohen, who had also been renting loft space on Avenue D the past 10 years, also shares his disgust for the development of the neighborhood.

"Look at that building going up next door,” he said, shaking a fist at the 11-story high-rise under construction just outside his south-facing window. "Everything’s crowding in. There’s no more light in here!"

Upon his release from prison, Cohen plans live in his Catskills country home.

As The New York Times has pointed out, "Cohen's clients have included political activists and terrorism defendants, among them Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, bin Laden’s son-in-law."

Mexican food spot slated for former Native Bean space on Avenue A



Now that the Native Bean has reopened in its new home at 36 Avenue A... let's turn our attention to what's taking over its former space undergoing a renovation now at 50 Avenue A between East Third Street and East Fourth Street.

An applicant going by Villa Cemita Inc. is on this month's CB3/SLA committee meeting docket.

According to paperwork (PDF!) on file at the CB3 website, the new restaurant will serve "Puebla/Mexican food," including breakfast. The proposed hours are 7 a.m. to midnight every day except for Sunday, when they'd close at 8 p.m. In total, there are 10 tables with seating for 20 people. The applicant describes the place as "a small, community-oriented restaurant."

The applicants, who are seeking a beer-wine license, will not be appearing before the committee next Monday night at 6:30.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Space that houses Native Bean on Avenue A is for rent

Native Bean space apparently back on the market

Native Bean will be moving on Avenue A

Plywood wraps itself around the incoming Suffolk Arms



Just noting the recent arrival of the plywood around the long-vacant 269 E. Houston St. storefront at Suffolk.

As The New York Times first noted back in September, the new venture is Suffolk Arms, a cocktail bar from Giuseppe Gonzalez, "whose bartending credits include Golden Cadillac, PKNY and Dutch Kills."

According to the Times, "Expect an English pub exterior but a New York feel inside."

Several other suitors kicked the tires on the space to no avail.

The last tenant here was The Local 269, which never reopened in the fall of 2012 after a flood apparently KO'd much of the live music venue's equipment. The Local 269 space was previously home to Meow Mix and Vasmay Lounge. The Local opened in February 2009.

Report: Cantilevered building in the works to hang out over the CVS on East Houston


[The doomed 304 Mulberry St.]

The new owners of two rental buildings on Mulberry Street between Bleecker and East Houston plan on demolishing one for a larger complex in its place.

According to The Real Deal (h/t Curbed), Broad Street Development bought 298 Mulberry St. and 304 Mulberry St. for $178.5 million. And plans are in the works to tear down No. 304, a 91-unit building circa 1974 that sits on Mulberry at Bleecker.

Per The Real Deal, No. 304 "is underbuilt by roughly 12,000 square feet, and with the additional air rights from 298 Mulberry it holds about 107,000 square feet of development rights." Broad Street plans on replacing No. 304 with a structure cantilevering over No. 298.

The CVS opened last summer in the surviving corner at East Houston.



The 298 retail space previously housed a Subway, a dry cleaners and Soho Billiards.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Retail space that included Soho Billiards is up for grabs on East Houston Street

Monday, January 5, 2015

Let's pay a visit to the 'Mighty Manhattan' of 1949


[On the Bowery in 1949]

Here's a short film titled "Mighty Manhattan, New York's Wonder City" from 1949 that is making the rounds again.

According to IMDB:

The film visits many of the neighborhoods and landmarks on Manhattan Island and occasionally includes a history lesson. The neighborhoods include the Bowery, Chinatown, Herald Square, and Times Square. Some of the architectural highlights are the Empire State Building, the New York Public Library, Temple Emanuel, the Central Park Zoo, and the Rockefeller Center complex.

It's a 20-minute film, though this version cuts off before the 16-minute mark. There's a visit to the Bowery at the 3:38 point ... which the narrator calls "a sad reflection on the best-laid plans of the city founders."



H/T @TBconfid

Dial-a-Song by They Might Be Giants returns



In 1983, They Might Be Giants published a phone number in the back of The Village Voice that led to the band's answering machine, where callers would find a new song every day. (The service lasted until 2006.)

Now, TMBG's John Flansburgh and John Linnell are bringing back the service starting today with a new era for Dial-a-Song at (844) 387-6962. The band is promising a new song each week throughout 2015.

Per The Wall Street Journal:

“When we first did it, there were tremendous shortcomings to the phone machine in terms of fidelity,” said Mr. Flansburgh, 55 years old. “Actually, if we had any sustained notes in the song, the machine would reject it, mistaking it for the beep at the end of the message. So there were all these odd choices that were nonmusical.”

You can find the band's Dial-a-Song website here ... and their YouTube page.

TMBG became regulars in the East Village performance art scene in the early 1980s, playing steady shows at the likes of the Pyramid and 8BC.

And not a Dial-a-Song. From 1988.



Previously on EV Grieve:
On the phone with John Linnell of They Might Be Giants

Noted



Spotted in Tompkins Square Park this morning... photos by Derek Berg...

NYU neighbors Just Sweet and Everything Bagels have apparently closed on 3rd Avenue



An EVG reader tells us that both storefronts closed at the start of the New Year here in the base of NYU's Third North dorm at East 12th Street…



There aren't any closed signs… but the interiors have that gone-out-of-business look…





We echo the reader, who said "Rent hike? Lease up? Dunno."

There is an auction today at 3:30 inside the Bagels space. (Details here.)

Meanwhile down Third Avenue … two storefronts remain for rent in the base of NYU's Alumni Hall at East Ninth Street.

Updated 2:12 p.m.

Several readers noted that the auction sign, with an unfortunate typo, is now up on the door. The auction starts at 3:30.


[Photo by Dave Whitaker]

Madman Espresso opening new location on University Place


[Photo via Madman Espresso]

Madman Espresso opened two years ago to the date at 319 E. 14th St. near Second Avenue.

Now the folks there tell us that they are opening a new location at 54 University Place (at 10th Street) next month. This will be their third location … in addition to one at West 35th Street that opened back in May.

About tomorrow's PS 64 holiday card delivery to City Hall



Here's more information about tomorrow afternoon's PS 64 and CHARAS/El Bohio community center holiday card delivery to Mayor de Blasio ... via the EVG inbox...

City Councilwoman Rosie Mendez will be joined by colleagues, community residents and "3 Kings" to deliver frankincense, myrrh and gold (chocolate coins) with more than 1,000 holiday cards, petitions and a letter to Mayor de Blasio requesting one holiday gift — the return of the former PS 64 and CHARAS/El Bohio community center to the Lower East Side/East Village for community use.

Elected officials and residents of the Lower East Side are urging the Mayor to help return to the community the historic landmarked building that was saved by the community in the 1970s.

The building located at 605 E. Ninth St. was auctioned off and sold by Mayor Guiliani 15 years ago and has now been vacant for 13 years. This past Sept. 22, the Department of Buildings issued a Stop Work Order to halt construction that may have begun under a Partial Work Permit that was reportedly issued based on misinformation filed with DOB by developer Gregg Singer.

Here's a flyer with details about when all this is happening...


[Click on image to enlarge]

Find more info at the website of the grassroots organization SOCCC (Save Our Charas Community Center), who has been collecting the holiday cards with other community groups.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Testimony Of Councilmember Rosie Mendez regarding the former PS 64

[Updated] At the 'Save Our Community Center MARCH AND RALLY'

Landmarks Preservation Commission asks to see modified plans for former PS 64

The Landmarks Preservation Commission approves application for modifications at PS 64

Let's take a look at the New York Sports Club on Avenue A without the sidewalk bridge



Workers removed the sidewalk bridge from outside 28 Avenue A on Saturday.

The address is the new home of a New York Sports Club.

And we can now enjoy the FULL VIEW of the renovated building ...





The Gracefully sign remains (the market closed in November) ... and the storefront remains for rent.

Still no official word on when the gym opens.



Previously on EV Grieve:
New York Sports Club in the works for Avenue A

Sidewalk bridge and scaffolding arrive ahead of planned New York Sports Club on Avenue A

New York Sports Club says hello on Avenue A

Familiar Burger-Klein sign has disappeared from Avenue A

Here is the New York Sports Club building on Avenue A

2 new coffee choices for you



Dave on 7th reports that C&B (Coffee and Breakfast) had a sneak preview Saturday morning here at 178 E. Seventh St. just west of Avenue B.

Ali the owner (who previously worked hung out at 7A see comments) was handing out free coffee. Dave on 7th said that it is a great space.

Not sure of an official opening date just yet. The space was previously home to Korzo Haus, which closed at the end of October.

Meanwhile on East 10th Street (No. 280) between Avenue A and First Avenue…



Cafe Silan, which has a variety of coffee and house-made pastries with natural sweeteners (like silan, a Middle-Eastern date paste), is now in soft-open mode.

BoweryBoogie, who first noted this arrival back in November, reported that the former manager of Tiny's Giant Sandwich Shop is one of the proprietors behind this new venture.