Thursday, April 9, 2015

14th and C now waiting for the Karl Fischer-designed 15-story retail-residential complex



Crews have demolished the one-level structure at 644 E. 14th St. at Avenue C.



Coming soon, as previously reported: a 15-story mixed-use retail-residential complex here on the southwest corner.

The Karl Fischer-designed building will total 61,789 square feet. DOB permits show 8,578 square feet of commercial space on the ground floor. The remainder of the first five stories will host a community facility, which will span 18,937 square feet, and 50 apartments will sit above.

Per the signs not he plywood, the work will be completed by summer 2015. Hurry! Unless they mean the demo...



The previous tenant here was the R&S Strauss auto parts store, which closed in April 2009.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Development back in play for East 14th Street and Avenue C

More details on the sale of 644 E. 14th St.

Here comes a 15-story retail-residential complex for East 14th Street and Avenue C

Prepping the former R&S Strauss auto parts store for demolition on East 14th Street and Avenue C

City OKs 15-story mixed-use retail-residential building on 14th and C

Here's what's coming to the former Hummus Place space on St. Mark's



Last Thursday, we noted that a new tenant was in line to take over the recently shuttered Hummus Place at 109 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Eater has more details on what's coming soon here: Ori Apple, who owns the Hummus Place mini-chain, is opening a restaurant called Timna NYC in the space.

Amir Nathan, one of the partners in the new venture, described Timna NYC as "a casual but elegant Mediterranean place."

There are plans for Yemenite kubaneh bread, tacos made with Jerusalem's signature mixed grill of sweetbreads, preserved lemon, and tahini, and sea bass sashimi with tabouli and tzatziki. Nathan says the team is a couple of weeks from a soft opening.

Hummus Place closed for renovations in early February, never to reopen (at least as Hummus Place).

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Patti Smith is headlining the East Village relief benefit Sunday at Theatre 80

Author Alan Kaufman, who's helping to organize the fundraiser at Theatre 80 Sunday evening for displaced East Village residents, confirmed to EVG contributor Stacie Joy this afternoon that Patti Smith is now headlining the event.

All the money collected will be donated to the Good Old Lower East Side (GOLES) to help those affected by the deadly gas explosion at 121 Second Ave. on March 26.

The benefit at Theatre 80, 80 St. Marks Place between First Avenue and Second Avenue, will feature “performers and celebrities from the world of music, literature and drama,”per the Facebook event page.

As previously noted, Sting and Trudie Styler donated a sum reported at $36,000 for the benefit.

There are a handful of tickets, ranging from $70 to $150, left. You may order them here.

We'll have more information about the event from Stacie tomorrow.

Image by smial via Wikipedia

Reminders: Fundraiser for 2nd Avenue tonight at the Parkside Lounge



Tonight at the Parkside Lounge (East Houston at Attorney) ... Details via the EVG inbox...

Please join us as we come together as a community to raise money for all those affected. $5 at the door gets you awesome food from neighborhood establishments, a drink ticket, drink specials, DJs and live music. Try your luck in the raffle and win big in the silent auction! All food, entertainment and prizes are being generously donated by local businesses.

ALL proceeds from the door, raffle and auction will be donated directly to LES Ready!, a wonderful group that focuses on both preparedness training and recovery in the event of a disaster, and works specifically with residents of the Lower East Side and the East Village. LES Ready! has generously agreed to earmark the funds contributed from this event specifically for those displaced by the explosion and fire. It will be used to help families and residents pay for security deposits and rent in their new homes, as well as related expenses.

Visit the Facebook event page for more details on the area businesses who donated items for the evening.

Report: Investigators eye potential murder charges for up to 6 people in 2nd Avenue explosion


[Photo from March 26 by Peter Brownscombe]

Law enforcement sources told the Post that investigators are "looking at potential murder charges" in the deadly Second Avenue gas explosion on March 26.



As the Post reports, sources said there are "six prime suspects" in the blast at 121 Second Ave.: landlord Maria Hrynenko, her son Michael Jr., contractor Dilber Kukic as well as an unidentified subcontractor and two workers.

"Ultimately, it's going to be up to the DA’s office and, most likely, a grand jury, but we’re not ruling that out as we gather evidence," a source told the paper.

Per the Post:

In addition to murder — which carries a maximum 25 years to life in the slammer — other charges said to be under consideration include second-degree manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

Officials have said that the blast that killed two men and brought down three buildings was the result of an illegally tapped gas line.

Out and About in the East Village

In this weekly feature, East Village-based photographer James Maher provides us with a quick snapshot of someone who lives and/or works in the East Village.



By James Maher
Name: Kecia (and Hazel)
Occupation: Nurse
Location: Tompkins Square Park
Time: 4:30 pm on Tuesday, March 17

I’m a nurse at Bellevue. I used to be in the ER, but I just changed to the baby unit. I’ve been a nurse for about 15 years and I’ve moved here around two or three years ago. I live in the Baruch Houses on Delancey Street, but I’m originally from Brooklyn.

My family lived in Brooklyn for a long time. My parents came from the islands. My dad settled in the Saratoga area of Brooklyn from Jamaica and then he sent for my mother and two siblings. I’m the youngest of seven.

I have family on Avenue A and some people on Avenue C, and then in the Baruch Houses, so I used to come here when I was younger. There’s been a very rapid change, for the better though. I always say for the better. Now I walk these streets with no problem, no fear and no trepidation.

When I used to come here to visit family as a child, it was drug infested. Not to say that the drugs are gone, because they’re not, but they’re not as prevalent. The buildings were dilapidated, garbage everywhere. It was not so much scary, but you had to know people in order for things to not happen to you. You can’t really talk much about the rats because they’re still here. They’re infinite. But it was still very family oriented. In the summertime we’d go over to the East River Park and have picnics. The family would pack picnics and we’d go over there and play basketball and soccer and different things like that.

The area itself — it’s so up and coming. I can [relate to] that because the same thing happened in Brooklyn. I really couldn’t afford Brooklyn prices anymore. I was in Crown Heights, which is a very popular neighborhood now. The gentrification has taken over to the point where people are being pushed out. I had a beautiful apartment, beautiful – high ceilings, fireplace and when I came around here I had to lose a lot of things. But at the same time I still enjoy it because it reminds me a lot of Brooklyn.

Family also brought me here and I took advantage of it when I got the opportunity to come over, because I felt comfortable in the area. I enjoy it. Everything is in proximity. I walk everywhere. I walk to work in the morning. I walk with my dog all the time. This is Hazel’s favorite dog park. She loves it here.

James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.

New website offers East Village Relief for businesses and displaced residents

East Village Relief is a new website offering "support for those affected by the East Village disaster and those wishing to help."

There's a list of resources and contacts for residents and businesses.

The site's sponsors are Community Board 3, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, State Sen. Brad Hoylman, Assembly Member Deborah Glick, Councilmember Rosie Mendez and the Lower East Side Buisness Improvement District.

Find the site here.

Tuome expected to be back open in another 2 weeks


[Photo of Tuome from August 2014]

As we've been reporting, a small kitchen fire on March 29 temporarily put Tuome out of commission at 536 E. Fifth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B.

Aside from a sign on the door last Thursday…there hasn't been any official notification about the closure from the well-regarded restaurant that opened last August.

Yesterday, though, a Tuome rep sent us this statement:

On behalf of the entire Tuome team, we are relieved to announce that we plan to reopen the restaurant within approximately two weeks following renovations to repair the damages from the kitchen fire we experienced on March 29.

We are very sorry to have disappointed our new and existing guests during this unexpected closure, and we are remarkably grateful to all who have been so supportive since we opened in August 2014. We look forward to reopening as soon as our renovation and cleanup have been completed. Thank you all for your concern and support — we're excited to reopen and to welcome you back to Tuome.

Katz's is now the last business on East Houston between Ludlow and Orchard



The one level row of storefronts on East Houston between Ludlow and Orchard are now business-free with the exception of Katz's.

Empanada Mama is the last to bow out...


[Photo via @fnytv]

They aren't going to far away as the sign notes — 95 Allen St., as first reported by BoweryBoogie.

So everyone else, including Ray's Pizza, Bereket and Lobster Joint, among others — have closed or moved to make way for Ben Shaoul's new development... Oh, there it is!



Shaoul's latest is a 10-story building with 83 residential units spread out over 95,000-square feet... plus 13,500 square feet of ground-floor retail.

Katz's, who sold their air rights to help make this happen, isn't going anywhere.

H/T EVG reader Chris F.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Remembering Moises Ismael Locón Yac


[Image via Facebook]

The New York Times has a report on the wake and funeral for Moises Ismael Locón Yac, one of two men killed in the gas explosion at 121 Second Ave. on March 26.

In Queens, where Mr. Locón lived in a rented room decorated with images of his adopted city, the Guatemalan Consulate had arranged a funeral at the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which has connections to Guatemalans in Jamaica, as well as the wake in Brooklyn. It had been up to Mr. Locón’s three brothers and his cousin, far from their family in Guatemala, to take care of everything else.

“He was just working,” Mr. Locón’s cousin, Pablo Yac, 23, said during the wake. “I’m crying for him.”

Mr. Locón’s brother Alfredo, 30, stood off to one side, trying to organize things. He was the oldest, the one who had tried to take care of his brothers in New York. Asked if he knew that people had been donating to a fund for the family, created by a woman in the East Village, Alfredo nodded. “We’re thankful for everything that people have done for us,” he said, his voice breaking.

Hugo Ortega was the only one of Locón's Sushi Park co-workers to attend the wake.

“I’m always going to miss him. I love him. He was my best friend,” he said, distraught. “He was a very good person. Everyone loved him very much.”

Previously on EV Grieve:
Remembering East Village blast victim Nicholas Figueroa

Cops say this guy has robbed 6 local businesses in the past week



The NYPD has released information about a suspect wanted in connection with robbing six East Village and Gramercy Park businesses.

According to police, the suspect has either displayed a knife or simulated a gun and demanded money.

Here are the six incidents from the past week...

• Around 3:25 a.m. Thursday at One’s Fruit and Grocery, 315 First Ave. The suspect took $400
• Around 10:20 p.m. Saturday, again at One’s Fruit and Grocery. The suspect took $950
• At 2:16 p.m. Sunday at I.Q. Décor, 242 E. 14th St. The suspect took $366
• Around 3 a.m. Monday at I Green Market, 271 First Ave. The suspect took $600
• Around 5:05 p.m. Monday at Lancelotti Housewares, 66 Avenue A. The suspect took $200
• Around 9:05 p.m. Monday at New Up and Up Laundry, 13 Avenue A. The suspect took $250
• Around 1:45 a.m. Tuesday at East Village Fruit and Vegetable, 229 Avenue B. The suspect got nothing.

The police have only offered this description: The suspect is a man in his 40s. DNAinfo has a video clip of the suspect.

Anyone with information that could help in the investigation is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477). You may also submit tips online.

Please do not deface the Joe Strummer mural



Thank you

Previously

H/T The Long-Lost Intern of EV Grieve

EV Grieve Etc.: Tickets for Taste of 7th; new chair for SLA


[Tompkins Square Park photo yesterday by Allen Semanco]

Taste of 7th is this weekend (Luke's Lobster)

A crazy East Village neighbor: "He called my roommate a prude b____ for not succumbing to his middle-aged wiles, then by way of threat casually mentioned that he had a key to our apartment." (Thrillist)

Cuomo appoints new chair of the State Liquor Authority (BoweryBoogie)

This East Seventh Street townhouse for sale includes an open air shower and a trampoline (Curbed)

A Broadway and East 14th Street then and now (Off the Grid)

A look at K’ook, now serving Korean fare on East Sixth Street (Bedford & Bowery)

Bike! Bonanza at Sara D. Roosevelt Park Saturday (The Lo-Down)

Donut Pub on 14th Street celebrating a big anniversary (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Palm Steakhouse closes for first remodeling in almost 90 years (Eater)

The mad history of moving in NYC (BoingBoing)

Inside the demolished Roseland Ballroom (Gothamist)

...and tonight at the Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space (MoRUS), 155 Avenue C between East Ninth Street and East 10th Street:

• Christiania 1971-2015: The Story of Europe's Biggest and Most Long Lasting Squat (Details here)

... and tomorrow night from 6:30-8 at 20 Cooper Square (Bowery at East Fifth Street):

• The Colloquium For Unpopular Culture and Powerhouse Books Present: KILL CITY: LOWER EAST SIDE SQUATTERS 1992-2000
Facilitated by NYU professor Sukhdev Sandhu
Artist talk/slide show by Ash Thayer followed by conversation with Stephen Duncombe, FLY, and Peter Spagnuolo (Details here)

[Updated] 2nd Avenue subletters suing for $40 million over deadly explosion


[Photo from March 26 by George Jarema via Facebook]

Two women who were subletting an apartment at 129 Second Ave. are the first to file lawsuits related to the deadly explosion on March 26. They are each seeking $20 million, according to the Post today.

Lucie Bauermeister, 23, and Anna Ramotowska, 26, said they were in their third-floor sublet, changing for the gym, when the blast blew out the front of Sushi Park at 121 Second Ave. several buildings away.

When they went outside to see what had happened, glass was flying, and Ramotowska said she got “like, five or six scratches” on the back of her left hand when she used it to protect her face.

The roomies ran back to grab their valuables, including Ramotowska’s pet Pomeranian, Darnell, and a fur coat that had belonged to Baumeister’s grandma.

And!

Baumeister said she couldn’t sleep and lost her appetite after the blast and started seeing a $175-an-hour psychologist who recommended at least six to eight more weeks of counseling.

As the Post notes, despite the trauma, "neither looked worse for wear during a primped-up appearance on Fox 5’s 'Good Day New York.'"



The building they were staying in, No. 129, was reopened to residents on March 28. Bauermeister, who described herself as a "beach baby at heart," is planning to move to Savannah, Ga. Ramotowska is also heading to the South where her parents recently relocated.

Updated: Thanks to the reader in the comments for this... a copy of the complaint (PDF). Per the Post: "Defendants are Con Ed, 121 Second Ave. landlord Maria Hrynenko, contractor Dilber Kukic and Hyeonil Kim, owner of the destroyed Sushi Park eatery."

'Small Biz Crawl' this Saturday on 2nd Avenue



From the EVG inbox...

#SaveNYC is a grassroots, crowd-sourced, D.I.Y. movement to protect and preserve the diversity and uniqueness of the urban fabric in New York City. As our vibrant streetscapes and neighborhoods are turned into bland, suburban-style shopping malls, filled with chain stores and glossy luxury retail, #SaveNYC is fighting for small businesses and cultural institutions to remain in place.

After a disaster like the deadly Second Avenue explosion and fire, impacted small businesses struggle to survive. #SaveNYC is holding a Small Biz Crawl along Second Avenue to bring customers, cash and attention to those mom-and-pops in need. This weekend, we’ll do the western side of Second Avenue; next time, the eastern side.

Meet #SaveNYC on Saturday, April 11, at noon. We’re starting at Gem Spa on the northwest corner of Second Avenue and St. Mark’s Place. Buy your magazines, newspapers and egg creams at this first stop. From there, we’ll head down toward 7th Street. Do some gift shopping at Himalayan Visions. Then it’s lunch at the B&H Dairy or Paul’s Da Burger Joint. Your choice. After lunch, we’ll weave our way across the barricades of 7th Street to stock up on groceries at the New Yorkers Foodmarket. Please bring your #SaveNYC sign to let everyone know who we are and why we’re there. Click here to print out signs — and to find out more about #SaveNYC.

In a tweet to us yesterday, Paul's said that their business was down 75 percent since the explosion.

Other food choices on the west side of Second Avenue are Taqueria Diana and Ramen Misoya.

As for B&H, they are hopeful to be back open tomorrow.

Here is a new building on East 14th Street


[Photo from August 2013]

After nearly a two-year gut renovation and one-floor extension … workers have removed the scaffolding and construction netting from 212 E. 14th St. near Third Avenue.

And here you go…



Looks inoffensively generic enough…

The retail space has been on the market. The storefront was most recently the Super Saving Store, which closed in June 2011.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Residential, retail and an additional floor for 212 E. 14th St.

Work continues at interesting new business coming to East 14th Street


[Reader photo from January]

Work is finally underway at 440 E. 14th St., where a Domino's Pizza is coming soonish. Workers have stripped away the ample 99-cent signage from the former tenant — the 99-Cent Discount Center.



Meanwhile, next door, the former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office Branch awaits demolition to make way for an 8-story retail-residential building ...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Interesting new business opening on East 14th Street

Mi Garba is now open on 4th Avenue



The first U.S. outpost of Mi Garba ("I like it" in Italian) opened back on Thursday at 129 Fourth Ave. just south of East 13th Street.

As the Post reported in January:

The flagship 1,000 square-foot space ... will include a restaurant with 10 tables. There will also be Tuscan food and wine for sale along with a boutique offering fashion items, including custom-made shirts and jackets.

That description made the place sound like something out of an airport gift shop… the actual finished product looks nicer...







The place wasn't open for business yet for the day when we stopped by. You can check out the Mi Garba website here for a list of their food products.

This storefront has been (mostly) empty since Dryden Gallery moved out two and a half years ago.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Tuscan food specialist opening 1st U.S. outpost on 4th Avenue for some reason

Monday, April 6, 2015

Remembering East Village blast victim Nicholas Figueroa


[Image via Facebook]

Friends and loved ones filled the R.G. Ortiz Funeral Home in Washington Heights this afternoon to pay their respects to Nicholas Figueroa, 23, one of the two victims in the Second Avenue gas explosion on March 26

From the Post:

Nicholas Figueroa was the kind of man fathers would want to marry their daughters, his Scoutmaster said at his wake...

“He was very young, so motivated,” Luis Benitez said as services got under way. “He was a pillar of the community.”

From the Daily News:

"It's devastating," Neal Figueroa said. "There are no words adequate to describe my brother. This room speaks for itself. Look at all these people who have come to honor my brother."

From DNAinfo:

"He had all the love for everybody," his father, Nixon Figueroa said. "Everywhere he goes he gave a good smile, he brought life into people. He was a caring kid."

The funeral for Figueroa is tomorrow at the Church of the Holy Name of Jesus, 207 W. 96th St., at 10 a.m.

Services for the second victim, Moises Ismael Locón Yac, 27, will reportedly be in his native Guatemala.

The East Village residents who launched a crowdfunding campaign to help with Locón's funeral expenses have been unable to track down any of his family members. If his family can't be found, then the money will be returned to the individual donors. The campaign has raised $6,361 in eight days.

Meanwhile, the NYPD is "poised to launch a homicide investigation" into the deadly blast, according to published reports.

Report: 2nd Avenue blast 'is likely going to end up a homicide case'


[Outside Gem Spa on 2nd Avenue]

The NYPD is "poised to launch a homicide investigation" into the deadly blast at 121 Second Ave., the Daily News reports this afternoon.

This is likely going to end up a homicide case,” a high-ranking police source told the Daily News. “The DA will probably bring it to the grand jury.”

The focus of the criminal investigation is building owner Maria Hrynenko and contractor Dilber Kukic, sources have said.

Both are suspected of tapping into a gas main meant to serve only a first-floor sushi restaurant to provide heat to Hrynenko’s tenants on upper floors. Kukic is no stranger to the law. He was arrested in October for allegedly trying to give a city inspector a $600 cash bribe to make two violations on buildings he owns on W. 173rd St. in Manhattan go away.

“No one's going to be charged for doing sloppy work, but if it can be proved that someone was told to do this, then it's a criminally negligent homicide,” the source said.

Nicholas Figueroa, 23, and Moises Ismael Locón Yac, 27, died in the blast at Sushi Park restaurant on March 26. More than 20 other people were injured as three buildings at 119-123 Second Ave. were destroyed.