Friday, April 3, 2015

EV Grieve Etc.: Jesse Malin's new record; Nevada Smiths' debt


[Avenue A aerialists via Grant Shaffer]

Reaching out and helping the homeless (The Bowery Mission)

Egg watch at Ageloff Towers (Gog in NYC)

Jesse Malin on his new record, "New York Before the War" (Rolling Stone)

A look at Noreetuh, the new Hawaiian restaurant on First Avenue (Eater)

Nevada Smiths owes NJ bank $146,789.21 (DNAinfo)

Rent hike KOs longtime Clinton Street bridal shop (The Lo-Down)

R Bar replacement Rebelle making progress on the Bowery (BoweryBoogie)

A "Gremlins" screening and cast reunion tomorrow night (Anthology Film Archives)

Inside Mace, the new bar at the former Louie 649 on East Ninth Street (Gothamist)

Revisiting some rare New York Dolls footage (Flaming Pablum)

A Velvet Underground reunion on French TV in 1972 (Dangerous Minds)

Remembering a heroic Titanic victim at Grace Church on Broadway and East 10th Street (Ephemeral New York)

... and at the Dorian Grey Gallery on East Ninth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue...



... and tonight via the EVG inbox...

It's The Annual Easter Vs. Passover Smackdown:
Full Moon Festa Edition

Celebrate & skewer Easter/Passover w/the Gorgeous Ladies & Lads of Bloodwrestling, on GLOB Friday! Under a fabled Full Red Moon, on the eve of Passover, the bloodwrestling underground is alive! And lurks just behind the the shadows of the encroaching NYU empire...

Our Lady of Perpetual PMS & Referee Mike SOS present seasonal characters paired in ferocious & hilarious matches! Also starring: live music from Lady Bizness & Maps to Atlantis. In the Front DJ Booth of Doom: DJ Oscar, Pat Pervert & Sam Harris. This is a MIXED event in the spirit of true fun & sports satire! Anyone disrespectful or disruptive will be removed, possibly dismembered. Men are strongly suggested to come to this event with a woman. Latecomers suffer obstructed views & ridicule. :) NO A-HOLES, NO D-BAGS!

Otto's Shrunken Head
538 E. 14th St. (btwn Ave. A & B), Manhattan
9p, 10pm showtime, $5 Cover

2nd Avenue update (April 3)


[Photo yesterday by PandaCat via Facebook]

The latest headlines

Manhattan District Attorney seeks to quiz Maria Hrynenko, landlord of East Village building leveled in gas explosion (Daily News)

Landlord of building that caused East Village blast was sued in 2013 (DNAInfo)

Investigators find gas plumbing in two leveled East Village buildings mostly intact (Newsday)

Everything we know so far about the East Village gas explosion (The Observer)

Con Ed flooded with reports of gas leaks since East Village blast (New York Post)

Week after explosion, nearby businesses feel economic impact (NY1)

2 women reunite with their beloved cats after building explosion (HuffPost)

Here is information gleaned from the most recent (dated yesterday) Inter-Agency Update:

• Currently located at 331 E. 10th St., the Red Cross Reception Center for displaced residents will move to the Community Board 3 Office, located at 59 E. Fourth St., on Friday April 3. Hours of operation at the new location will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, 4/3, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, 4/4. The center will be closed on Sunday, 4/5. Hours of operation will be from noon to 9 p.m. on Monday, 4/6, and Tuesday, 4/7
• To allow for FDNY marshals and NYPD Arson and Explosives Unit investigation to continue, debris removal will continue intermittently
• Approximately 4,400 cubic yards of debris searched and removed as of [yesterday] morning. Estimated to be more than half of the debris on site. This represents 85 trailer loads of debris removed. Each cubic yard weighs approximately one ton.

Donations, Services and Events

• Sting and Trudy Styler have donated $36,000 to a relief benefit for victims of the East Village explosion and fire to be held at Theater 80, 80 St. Mark's Place, on Sunday, April 12 at 8 p.m. The money will go to GOLES. Details on the Facebook invite here

• Next Wednesday at Parkside Lounge...



• Collections for the Mayor's Fund to Advance NYC continue...



Missing Pets

This cat was found near the explosion site on Wednesday night... now at The Animal Medical Center ... she is not microchipped...



Email the Center here

Blockheads bringing their San Francisco-style burritos to the East Village


[EVG file photo]

The city's seventh Blockheads is in the works to take over the Unidentified Flying Chickens space at 60 Third Ave. near East 11th Street. Aside from a full-service dining room, this location will also offer take out and delivery.

Brothers Ken and Don Sofer opened the first of the casual, San Francisco-style Mexican restaurants on Third Avenue and East 34th Street in 1993. They also own the Benny's Burritos in the West Village. (Ken Sofer helped open the East Village Benny's, but sold his stake 10 years later.)

Blockheads is on this month's CB3/SLA committee agenda for a new liquor license.

In February, the owners of Taproom 307 went before CB3 for the space, but were met with resistance.

As for UFO, they never seemed to catch on, though, as we've pointed out, the Korean fried chicken specialists made it longer than the previous tenant — the 3-week-old Après.

Spina's Italian fare exits Avenue B; Indian food on the way



Spina had a nice little run at 175 Avenue B at East 11th Street… However, after nearly six years, the pasta place/trattoria has closed for good. It hasn't been open for at least a week.

The space had quietly been on the market. (The listing tells potential suitors to "exercise discretion and do not engage in conversation about the space with anyone at the restaurant.")

Meanwhile, there's an applicant on this month's CB3/SLA committee agenda for a new beer-wine license for the space. The principals are a husband-and-wife team who plan on opening an Indian restaurant called Babu Ji. The proposed hours are 10 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday; until 1 a.m. on Friday and Saturday.

The questionnaire (PDF!) on file at the CB3 website has more info as well as a sample menu.

Tuome remains closed on East 5th Street


[Photo from Tuesday evening]

Back on Sunday morning, a small fire broke out in the kitchen of Tuome, the well-regarded new restaurant at 536 E. Fifth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B… a resident who lives in the building said Tuome would be closed at least a week… we walked by on Tuesday night, and found the place closed up… no sign about a temporary closure, and no message on Tuome's social media properties…

There is a sign up now, though… perhaps this means they plan on being back in action tomorrow…

When the world's top collectors of Dom Pérignon rosé came to the East Village for dinner


[Photo from March 24 via @hanyakrill]

Meant to post this earlier in the week… for anyone who was curious about that 11 days of activity around the incoming Brant Foundation exhibition space on East Sixth Street between First Avenue and Avenue A.

We only heard that the space was hosting an event for Dom Pérignon.

The event was held on the evening of Thursday, March 26. (Perhaps worth noting that the fire was still raging nearby at 119-123 Second Ave.)

On Monday, The Wall Street Journal reported that it was for the world's top collectors of Dom Pérignon rosé.

Some excerpts from the article…

Nine rosé Champagne aficionados sat down for an intimate, one-of-a-kind pairing dinner … with Dom Pérignon Chef de Cave Richard Geoffroy.

Guests at the East Village event included New York Knicks star Carmelo Anthony, real-estate executive Michael Fascitelli and wine-store owner Robert Schagrin.

And!

The seven-course dinner featured dishes showcasing a global range of spices, from a Thai bouillon to an elegant mole verde to a duck entree, redolent of cumin and coriander, based on a 17th-century French recipe.

The dinner was held at 421 E. Sixth St. and the space decorated for the occasion by rock star Lenny Kravitz’s Kravitz Design, which brought in sculptures, dramatic lighting and sleek furniture.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Neighbors curious about the 11 days of activity at Peter Brant's exhibition space on East 6th Street

The art of noise on East 7th Street ahead of tomorrow night's event at the Brant Foundation

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Noted



You've no doubt seen the remains of the minivan on Cooper Square between East Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place… it had been parked along East Seventh Street near Second Avenue at the time of the explosion and subsequent fire last week… The NYPD towed the vehicle out of the way on Sunday evening…

And now, someone has put a for sale sign on it…



"Runs great — need little work." The number is to a landscape design company.

Photos this afternoon by Derek Berg

Updated: We heard that the cops towed it away a little earlier...

2nd Avenue update (April 2)


[M15s running again on 2nd Avenue via Derek Berg]

The latest headlines

Landlord's lawyer blames Con Ed in East Village explosion (The New York Times)

East Village building owner could be charged with manslaughter (New York Post)

Here's what investigators are looking for under East Village blast rubble (DNAinfo)

Buffalo State University to honor Nicholas Figueroa (NBC New York)

Gas leak prompts caution and unforeseen problems (WPIX)

Survivor of East Village explosion tells his story (WABC-7)

New Yorkers rush to help mom of 3 whose apartment burned down (People magazine)



Donations and Services

• The staff of Bar Virage across from the blast site have started a crowdfunding campaign for displaced restaurant workers (Give Forward)

• Speaking of Bar Virage... Via Facebook: "We are rallying at the neighborhood spot Virage – the restaurant directly across from last week's blast – to help get them back on their feet and get all our neighbors and fellow New Yorkers together for happy hour. Also included in this is an informal crawl between Via Della Pace and Van Leewan!" 6-9 p.m.

• Today from 11 to 2 pm., parishioners from the Church of the Nativity, 44 Second Ave. between East Second Street and East Third Street, will again be distributing donations to displaced residents. Details here.

• The 14th Street Y is offering displaced residents and their families six months of membership. Details here.

Professor Thom's is hosting another fundraiser for their Second Avenue neighbors. Tonight from 6-10, a donation at the door gets you a free beer from Harpoon Brewery as well as happy hour prices until 10 p.m. All the money collected at the door will go to charity. Professor Thom's is at 219 Second Ave. between East 13th Street and East 14th Street.

... and tonight...

RIP Moises Ismael Locón Yac


[Image from Facebook via the Daily News]

The medical examiner has confirmed that the second body discovered in the rubble of 121 Second Ave. on Sunday is Moises Ismael Locón Yac.

Locón, an employee at Sushi Park, was 27. He and Nicholas Figueroa died when a gas explosion rocked the building housing Sushi Park last Thursday.

Various media accounts noted that Locón sent most of his paycheck back to his family in Guatemala, where he worked as a school teacher before moving to the United States seven years ago.

On his days off in New York, Locón liked to accompany his older brother, Alfredo, and Alfredo's two children, to city parks.

According to The New York Times:

Despite a growing fondness for his adopted city — the walls of his rented room in Queens bore a poster of the Empire State Building and a framed cover from The New Yorker — Mr. Locón had been planning to return to Guatemala this year to reunite with his girlfriend [his childhood sweetheart], according to a cousin, Pablo Yac.

"I saw that young man every day," Michael Schumacher, the co-owner of a food market near the sushi restaurant told the Daily News. "Every single day we had a chat — you know, ‘How’s business?’ The kid worked hard for his family. He’s gone. He’s gone."

An East Village couple, who did not know Locón, has established a crowdfunding campaign to raise money to help his family pay for the funeral and other expenses. You may find details here. As of this post, $810 has been raised.

The possibility that the Stage won't reopen on 2nd Avenue


[EVG photo from Monday]

As we first reported on Tuesday, the city issued a Stop Work Order at 128 Second Ave. for what they say was installation of a gas pipe and fittings without a permit.



According to DOB documents, a city inspector on Monday observed this taking place in the cellar of the Icon Realty-owned building, across Second Avenue from the site of the gas explosion that killed two men and brought down three buildings. (Officials have said that a gas pipe underneath 121 Second Ave. might have been "inappropriately accessed" by outside contractors.)

According to a report at Gothamist yesterday: "Some of [128 Second Ave.'s] tenants say they've heard they may be without gas for six to 12 months."

All this has put the Stage, housed in a storefront at 128 Second Ave., out of commission. The beloved diner was able to open for business last Friday and Saturday, but had to close on Monday without any gas for cooking.

A Stage regular spoke with owner Roman Diakun yesterday. Per the regular: "Unfortunately, he might have to close down the restaurant for good. It's going to take much longer to turn the gas on than one would think. Between plans, permits and checking every apartment ... it could take months."

There's also complaint on file with the city Tuesday claiming the following: "Customer is reporting a restaurant hooking up gas pipes. Name of restaurant is Stage."



One resident said that this was a bogus claim, which led to more finger pointing in a building that tenants say has been plagued with problems since Icon bought it in the fall of 2013.

Per Gothamist:

"Tenants have had issues from the get-go," Yonatan Tadele, a community organizer with the Cooper Square Committee, told us. He noted that since Icon took over in 2013, landlords had been taking rent-stabilized tenants to court, then terrorizing remaining tenants with lengthy renovations, frequent gas shutdowns and other quality-of-life issues.

On March 24, the tenants association at 128 Second Ave. filed an HP Action for Repairs and Services against Icon Realty in NYC Housing Court. Among other issues, the remaining residents claim that there is inconsistent heat, broken fire escapes and a lack of fire alarms in the building.

As for the landlord and the city's Stop Work Order, WNYC reported the following:

Mitch Kossoff, a lawyer representing building owner Icon Realty, said the owners were "puzzled" and not aware of any gas work being done.

Early last evening, an Icon rep sent this email to residents of 128 Second Ave., several copies of which landed in our inbox:

Please be assured that Smicon Realty is committed to providing safe and habitable housing to the tenants of New York City, and upon notification of any issues, promptly deals with them.

Unfortunately, and as a backlash of the recent and tragic circumstances that occurred across the street, Con Edison has shut off gas service to a number of buildings, our building included.

Please be assured that we are acting diligently to have the gas service restored as quickly as possible and in the interim, we are trying to make arrangements for a temporary boiler.

We are also going to provide all tenants with double burner hot plates so you can cook. We would like for all tenants who wish to relocate to a Hotel of your choice starting immediately.

For those tenants who are not otherwise in arrears, Management will cover up to $200 per day for your Hotel accommodations until the hot water has been restored building wide.

Management will not cover any expenses that exceed the $200 per diem. Please submit your Hotel receipts into our office for reimbursement.

Your reimbursement check will be processed within 30 business days of receipt.

Your rent will be adjusted accordingly for the days you are without heat and hot water.

We sincerely apologize for this inconvenience and hope to have this matter resolved in a timely manner.

Previously on EV Grieve:
City serves stop work order on Icon Realty-owned building for installing gas pipe without permit across from deadly 2nd Avenue blast zone (48 comments)

Taking the Hummus Place off St.Mark's Place



On Tuesday, workers stripped the signage off the recently shuttered Hummus Place at 109 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue. The restaurant closed for renovations in early February, never to reopen.

Perhaps the space won't be vacant for too long. There's an applicant on this month's CB3/SLA committee agenda for a new beer-wine license for the space. CB3 hasn't filed the questionnaire online with more information on the applicant just yet.

Paprika hasn't been open lately on St. Mark's Place



Meanwhile, nearly directly across from the former Hummus Place on St. Mark's Place, Paprika has remained shuttered in recent weeks (at least three).

Calls to the restaurant are forwarded to a full voice mailbox. There isn't any mention of a closure on the restaurant's website or social media properties. In fact, Paprika, which specializes in Northern Italian cuisine, had been actively posting various menu items on Instagram as late as March 7.

Anyone know what's happening with the space?

Updated: There is a listing for the space on Loop Net, per a reader... the listing was last updated a year ago. It's currently listed as "off market." The asking monthly rent is/was $8,524.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Another East Village cat reunion



As we first reported earlier this morning, the NYPD and ASCPA found Sebastian (left) and Kitty Cordelia, who had been missing inside 125 Second Ave. following last Thursday's explosion. We also heard that searchers found an unharmed Laszlo yesterday.

Now eastvillagesiren tells us that Laszlo has been reunited today with his housemate Lulu ... (and their owner Yvonne)... We don't know all the details to the reunion...



By our count, at least three cats remain missing — Sago, Ryce and Leather-Face. And at least one dog has been reported missing, a pit bull named Pepper. The Washington Square Park Blog has more info here.

Tall man allegedly steals expensive statue

A man named Kitty Rotolo, who has reportedly been in and out of jail since 1985, walked into Nadaeu Furniture on East 11th Street and University Place on Saturday.

He picked up a gold-plated statue of Tara, the Hindu goddess of universal compassion valued at $39,940, and ran out the door, the Daily News reports.

A store manager followed Rotolo, who, at 6-8, was hard to miss. Someone alerted an NYPD patrol car nearby. As the police approached, Rotolo reportedly stopped, handed Tara back to the manager and apologized.

According to the News, he remains in jail held in lieu of $100,000 bail.

Art is not of actual allegedly stolen Tara

Local elected officials holding informational session tomorrow night for displaced East Village residents



Starts at 6:30 p.m. at St Mark's Church-in-the-Bowery, Second Avenue and East 10th Street...

2nd Avenue update (April 1)


[Photo by Caroleen Stewart]

The latest headlines

East Village explosion might have followed attempt to hide gas siphoning (The New York Times)

"A number of law enforcement sources said Tuesday the investigation could take several weeks and possibly a year to learn what caused the explosion and whether criminal charges are warranted." (Newsday)

Palisades woman owns building that exploded in East Village (News 12 Westchester)

Co-worker opens up about final moments with man believed dead in blast (NY1)

Single mom of three loses rent-stabilized apartment in East Village explosion (WPIX)

Taqueria Diana, San Loco, Paul's, Bar Virage all back open (Eater)

Here is information gleaned from the most recent (dated yesterday) Inter-Agency Update:

• Search and recovery operation is transitioning into evidence gathering and collection
• FDNY members continue to spot check debris, but full sifting is concluding
• Approximately 30 firefighters remain on site
• Marshals investigation continues
• A bus lane is now open on the East side of Second Avenue

Donations and Services

• Today from noon to 4:30 pm., parishioners from the Church of the Nativity, 44 Second Ave. between East Second Street and East Third Street, will be distributing donations to displaced residents. Details in our previous post.

• From 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today, Velselka is giving out $100 gift cards to displaced residents.

• The 14th Street Y is offering displaced residents and their families six months of membership. Details here.

• As we noted on Sunday, Theater for the New City on First Avenue is offering FREE clothing from their costume collection ("costume" street wear) to its neighbors displaced by the explosion. They have coats, jackets and other clothing. Call 212-254-1109 to make an appointment.

Professor Thom's is hosting another fundraiser for their Second Avenue neighbors. Tomorrow night from 6-10, a donation at the door gets you a free beer from Harpoon Brewery as well as happy hour prices until 10 p.m. All the money collected at the door will go to charity. Professor Thom's is at 219 Second Ave. between East 13th Street and East 14th Street.

Missing Pets

The Washington Square Park Blog has a running list of the missing pets from the buildings. You can find that post here.

And here is the flyer that Whiskers on Second Avenue and East Ninth Street has been distributing…



The number of missing cats has been reduced, though.



Another search by the NYPD and ASCPA yesterday at 125 Second Ave. turned up Sebastian (left) and Kitty Cordelia. They have been reunited with their owner, Kathleen Blomberg. No. 125 is still under a Full Vacate Order.

We also hear that searchers found an unharmed Laszlo yesterday.

The Church of the Nativity is distributing clothes and other items to displaced residents today



Story and photos by Stacie Joy

Today from noon to 4:30 pm., parishioners from the Church of the Nativity, 44 Second Ave. between East Second Street and East Third Street, will be distributing donations to displaced residents from last week's explosion.

I stopped by last night to see what was needed and how the community could help.

There were many tables and bags loaded with towels, sheets, bedding, clothing (men’s, women’s and kid’s, even some baby stuff), toiletries, food (nonperishable), and home goods all being sorted, folded and prepared to be distributed to those residents who lost everything in the recent fire and collapse. (All leftover items will go to the Catholic Worker, as the Red Cross and GOLES are no longer accepting donations.)


[Parishioner Benjamin Rodriguez]





Parishioner and event organizer Mercedes Sanchez explained that there will be people on site today to assist in both Spanish and English, but that they could use a few more volunteers between noon and 4 p.m. (She asks that you email her here if you can lend a hand.)

One of the church’s parishioners, Mildred Guy, lost her home of more than 45 years in the blast. She was at work at The Neighborhood School at the time.

She described a tight-knit group of tenants, with only eight units in her building at 45 E. Seventh St. The residents bonded at her apartment after Superstorm Sandy when they used her landline, the last one in the building, to communicate with loved ones.



She expressed concern over how her fellow tenants are coping with the disastrous events, though she was feeling blessed that she survived, thinking about how much worse it could have been had the explosion occurred when more people were at home.

She told me about the difficulties she and others are having with filling out forms, as HPD (Housing Preservation and Development) and DHCR (Division of Housing and Community Renewal) are requiring paperwork that few people can produce after the devastating fire.

When asked what her most pressing need was, she indicated housing — long-term housing. The apartments she was shown away from the neighborhood far exceeded her previous rent, and the units were much smaller. Her family has lived in the East Village since she moved here from Puerto Rico as a child. At 62, she said she was too young to qualify for senior assistance (SCREE), which becomes available at age 65.

She is currently staying in a hotel provided to her by the Red Cross, and explained that her son, his wife, and their baby only recently moved out of the apartment to start a new job in Albany.

While still processing her own grief, she spoke about gratitude, condolences, and how she is trying to remain busy and active so she doesn’t have to think too much about all that’s lost.

Mildred's son, Branden, established a GoFundMe page to help her with expenses.

25 Avenue B is on the market



The for sale sign went up last week at 25 Avenue B between East Second Street and East Third Street.

Tower Brokerage has the listing, which shows an asking price of $299,000 for the bi-level space. The monthly rent is listed as $16,882.63.

The previous bar here, Matty's, closed after just two months. In the past few years, the space was home to Idle Hands and Station B and Billy Hurricane's.

Sign of Spice on 1st Avenue



The Spice sign is up now at 71 First Ave. between East Fourth Street and East Fifth Street.

According to the note on the door, the Thai chainlet will open its branch here tomorrow.

In case you missed our post from March 21 … Pukk, the 11-year-old vegetarian/vegan Thai favorite, closed for good here after service on March 22. (Pukk and Spice share the same ownership.)

And as previously noted, the Spice on Second Avenue at East Sixth Street is on the rental market. Perhaps First Avenue will one day be the lone Spice in the East Village.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Pukk is closing for good after tomorrow night

Elvis Guesthouse officially ready for occupancy tonight

Elvis Guesthouse, the subterranean space at 85 Avenue A between East Fifth Street and East Sixth Street, has been in soft-open mode since February.

Now co-owner Zachary Mexico, who also runs Baby's All Right in Williamsburg, passes along word that the bar officially opens tonight.

The bar will have a rotating group of DJs, including Chances With Wolves. There will also be an occasional live act as well. (Punk duo Girlpool played back in February.)

Gothamist had a preview here.

Mexico and Billy Jones previously ran the Arrow Bar here, which closed in January.

Image by Clay Williams/Gothamist

Previously on EV Grieve:
Comeback special: Arrow Bar owners opening Elvis Guesthouse on Avenue A