Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Report: The Union Square Food Emporium will become a Key Food


[Photo via]

Back in July, A&P filed for chapter 11, its second bankruptcy of the decade. According to published reports, the grocery chain, whose brands include The Food Emporium, Pathmark and Waldbaum’s, plans to sell or close most stores.

As for the Food Emporium on East 14th Street in the base of the Zeckendorf Towers, one industry publication reports that this location will be sold to Key Food…



No word just yet on the timing of the transition … one EVG reader noted that some shelves are no longer being restocked….






Report: Long-dormant 1st Avenue development site changes hands



There's news about the long-dormant site on First Avenue adjacent to your favorite Rite Aid on East Fifth Street. After years of stops and starts and various renderings, the lot has been sold.

The legal wrangling is a little complicated. Here's some of it via The Real Deal, who first reported on the transaction:

Following a bitter internal battle for control of a long-stalled East Village development site, the owners have sold it to the Colonnade Group.

A group of partners including Ozymandius Realty and Orange Management closed last month on the $12.9 million sale of 75 First Avenue.

A rendering from 2007 showed a 14-floor development looking something like... (pre the the 2008 rezoning) ...


In April 2014, plans surfaced for an 8-story development that would look something like…



Per New York Yimby in April 2014:

Permits indicate the development will span 34,055 square feet, with the bulk of the project dedicated to residential use. 8,456 square feet will be given to ground-floor retail, while the remaining 25,599 square feet will be divided between 27 units. 75 First Avenue will stand 80 feet in total.

There aren't any details at the moment about what the Colonnade Group plans to do with the lot. The DOB previously approved the plans for the 8-story building.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Developer: A shorter building in the works now for 75 First Avenue

High-rise for 75 First Avenue back in play

Long-stalled First Avenue site now has a brand-new rendering

As the traffic islands disappear and appear on 3rd Avenue


[Back in July]

Back in July, workers installed pedestrian crosswalk islands along Third Avenue as part of the ongoing Astor Place Reconstruction Project… then! At the end of September, workers jackhammered away the island on the north part of the St. Mark's Place-Third Avenue intersection ... leaving behind a springy tar pit...


[EVG photo from Sept. 25]

Then yesterday! Workers began putting in a pedestrian island on the southern side of the St. Mark's Place-Third Avenue intersection…





There isn't a timetable just yet for the removal of this pedestrian crosswalk island.

Photos yesterday via EVG correspondent Steven

Bench in Tompkins Square Park dedicated to food writer Josh Ozersky


[Photo by Nick Solares via Eater]

Food writer Josh Ozersky died this past May 4 at age 47. According to published reports, he died after suffering a seizure in his Chicago hotel room.

His friends have come together to have a bench in Tompkins Square Park dedicated in his honor. Here's Eater's Nick Solares with the story:

Ozersky, who hailed from Atlantic City, NJ, always loved the East Village, where he once made his home. It is thus appropriate that the memorial bench that has been erected in his honor is located in Tompkins Square Park, near the dog run where he once romped with his puppy Judah and close to some of his favorite restaurants.

For those who are curious, the Parks Department has a program that allows people to dedicate spaces in city parks for a fee that goes to the park. Here are details about the Adopt-a-Bench program via the NYC Parks website:

When you adopt a bench in a City park, you can add a personalized message or inscription on a small plaque. Our bench adoptions, which are $2500 for an existing bench, support the upkeep and maintenance of that particular bench for 10 years.

On Friday night, Ozersky's friends gathered at the Boxcar Lounge on Avenue B to have a drink in his honor.

Monday, October 5, 2015

Sunset valley



The view downtown during the sunset this evening... via Bobby Williams...

Former home of the East 12th Party Crew now for sale


[EVG file photo]

The seven-story rental building at 531-533 E. 12th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B is now on the market, according to The Real Deal.

The building has 34 units and a 2,000-square-foot outdoor space.

Here are more details via the article:

Ackman-Ziff Real Estate’s Marion Jones and Alan Goodkin are marketing the building, built in 2009, as a long-term hold. There is no formal asking price, but it is expected to sell in the mid-to-high $30 million range.

“There is near-term upside when you consider that elevator buildings in the East Village typically command rent in the high-$70s to mid-$80s per square foot, and the average rent here is $56 per square foot,” Jones told The Real Deal. “Nearly half of the units have private outdoor space, a rare amenity that increasingly commands premium rents.”

Robert Zelman purchased the building in 2012 from Emmut Properties for $16.6 million.

The address received some attention in 2009 for being home to NYU's Delta Phi House/East 12th Party Crew:

531 East 12th Party Crew (Apt 1E)
Description:
There are lots of places to party in New York, but few can match the insanity of 531 East 12th Street. If you are tired of going out to bars, come to an apartment with a massive common room filled with multiple pong and flip cup tables.

Old Flat Top apparently has a new friend

[EVG photo from August 2011]

There was a time when you would see Old Flat Top (rear) with its friend the Free Willie Nelson (front) around the neighborhood, mostly on East Third Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue near where owner Ron Britt lived. Until the Free Willie Nelson — a 1973 Dodge Mahal Travco — caught on fire on East Sixth Street back in September 2011. And we never saw the Free Willie Nelson again...

Old Flat Top remained around... and now, as EVG regular Salim notes, OFT looks to have a new friend... spotted earlier on East Third Street...


[Photo this a.m. by @salim]

At this point we don't know if the second RV is a new resident or just visiting...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Everything that you've ever wanted to know about the "Free Willie" Nelson RV on Third Street

The Free Willie Nelson caught on fire!

Memorial for the Free Willie Nelson

Wayland owners catching a Drift on Avenue C


[129-131 Avenue C]

Babel is currently downsizing their hookah empire at 129-131 Avenue C between East Eighth Street and East Ninth Street. They are vacating the space at No. 129, which was home a few years back to the neighborhood bar Duke's.

As for No. 129, Robert Ceraso and Jason Mendenhall, who own The Wayland on Avenue C and East Ninth Street, have plans to open a new venture in the space called The Drift.

We asked Ceraso for more details.

"We are planning a neighborhood bar," he said via email. "No cocktail list. No high concept. Just a relaxed little neighborhood place for all of our neighbors who have been so great to us over the last four years at The Wayland."

They will go before CB3's SLA committee on Oct. 19 with their plans. (Find a PDF of their CB3 questionnaire here.)

"When that space was brought to our attention, the first thing we thought was of Duke’s and how Avenue C doesn't have a friendly little neighborhood place any more since Duke’s and Teneleven closed down," he said. "As much as the neighborhood supports The Wayland, we understand that sometimes people just want a relaxed drink without the live music, the crowds and the cocktails lists."

The Drift will also serve a variety of tacos and salads.

"We envisioned The Drift as a laid-back bar that takes some slight inspiration from small seaside bars that we’ve been in over the years," said Ceraso, who recently opened Good Night Sonny on First Avenue and St. Mark's Place. "The little places that have a mix of locals, surfers, backpackers and expats. My partner Jason and I have had a lot of experience in those bars over the years and the feel of those places has a special place in our hearts."

Previously on EV Grieve:
Babel expanding on Avenue C

Duke's is gone

Last chance for input on the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project


[Image via]

There are two remaining design presentations and outreach sessions this week regarding the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project.

Officials will be presenting actual design alternatives that residents can provide feedback on the project, which is being designed to mitigate future climate change and flood risks along the East River.

Here's the official description of the project:

The East Side Coastal Resiliency Project is a federally funded coastal protection initiative aimed at reducing flood risk due to coastal storms and sea level rise on Manhattan's East Side from East 23rd Street to Montgomery Street.

The ESCR Project is a priority of the City of New York as outlined in the 2015 One New York: The Plan for a Strong and Just City and by the innovative Rebuild by Design competition sponsored by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The project design intends to integrate flood protection into the community fabric, improving access to the waterfront rather than walling off the neighborhood.

As a CB3 rep told us:

"If folks are interested in providing feedback on what the waterfront will look like for the foreseeable future, then they should attend one of these two sessions ... these sessions are the opportunity for the public to weigh in on actual design alternatives. The waterfront will never look the same again, and people deserve a right to weigh in on that decision-making process."

Presentation locations:

Tuesday, Oct. 6
5:30-7:30PM
Grand St. Settlement
80 Pitt St.

Thursday, Oct. 8
6:30-8:30PM
Washington Irving High School
40 Irving Place

Brewing Soon signage arrives for Caffe Bene on Avenue A



Work is moving right along on the southeast corner of Avenue A and 13th Street, where the former laundromat is getting closer to becoming a Caffe Bene… the Brewing Soon signage arrived late last week…



… announcing the coffee and waffles from the company based in Seoul, South Korea … as well as a hiring notice…

The proprietors for this location received the OK from CB3 for a beer-wine license during the August meeting. Here's what CB3 had to say via the meeting minutes (PDF):

[W]hile Community Board 3 is reticent in approving an additional liquor license for a chain coffee shop at a previously unlicensed location in this already overburdened area which is serviced by many coffee shops, given that such a license is likely to be approved and the applicant has made amendments to its method of operation in response to community concerns...

A Caffe Bene is also in the works for the former Pinkberry space at 24 St. Mark's Place between Third Avenue and Second Avenue … Here's a look at that storefront on Saturday…



They have not applied for a liquor license. Yet anyway.

Previously on EV Grieve:
2 Caffe Bene locations coming to the East Village (45 comments)

Reader report: Rent hike washes away longtime Avenue A laundromat

Work starts on the 2 Caffe Bene spaces in the East Village

Mimi's close to serving hummus and other Middle-Eastern fare on East 14th Street



Just noting the recent arrival of the signage at the new home for Mimi's Hummus on East 14th Street just west of Second Avenue...



Back in the spring, Eater reported that the Ditmas Park-based Mimi's was expanding into Manhattan with locations at the Vanderbilt food hall next to Grand Central (now open!) and the East Village.

The 6-year-old Mimi's, which Eater says serves "some of the city's best hummus and shakshuka," will have an expanded menu here that includes "a few larger plates at dinner like lemon chicken meatballs, brisket, and the Middle Eastern rice and lentil dish mejadara."

We reached out to Mimi's to see if they have an opening date in mind. Will update when/if we hear back.

The small space was previously home for eight months to the $1 pizza/BBQ combo of Wicked Wolfe BBQ.

Laying the foundation for 26 Avenue B



The excavation continues at 26 Avenue B between East Second Street and East Third Street, where there are plans for an 8-unit, 6-floor residential building.



H/T Stacie Joy

Previously on EV Grieve:
[Updated] 6-story apartment building ready to rise from the former Croxley Ales beer garden

[Updated] Report: 28 Avenue B has been evacuated

Full-stop work order served at construction site adjacent to evacuated Avenue B building

Resident wants stuff back that workers took from not abandoned apartment

Is 26 Avenue B ready for its new building now?

Sunday, October 4, 2015

(Stuffed) Pizza Rats sighting on 1st Avenue



Here's a New York City Nature Scene from this afternoon on First Avenue between St. Mark's Place and East Seventh Street...



EVG correspondent Steven, who took these photos, didn't see anyone around to take credit for this installation...



However, the Pizza Rats are the work of Tina Trachtenburg, a.k.a. "Mother Pigeon," who creates soft sculpture pigeons and other urban vermin that she sells in city parks. She recently unveiled her Pizza Rat plushie in honor of the real-life Pizza Rat.

Week in Grieview


[Last Sunday's Super Blood Moon via Derek Berg]

Murder conviction for man who beat grandfather to death on East Sixth Street (Monday)

Someone tagged the 1832 white marble stoop of the Merchant’s House Museum — again (Tuesday)

NYPD searching for two suspects in armed robbery Monday night at VideoGamesNewYork (Wednesday)

The historic Charlie Parker Residence is for sale on Avenue B (Friday)

Blink Fitness coming to Avenue A (Monday)

Closing time: Portraits of three newly shuttered storefronts (Wednesday)

Subway (sandwich shop) closes on Third Avenue and NYU (Thursday)

Catching up with two former East Village residents six months after the Second Avenue explosion (MondayTuesday)

Out and About with Matthew (Wednesday)

Moms speak out about guns with the help of an illustrated book (Thursday)

Owners of the Cock head straight to State Liquor Authority for Lit Lounge space (Thursday)

Arepa Factory coming soon to Avenue A (Wednesday)

Demo time for East 13th Street garages that will yield to luxury condos (Tuesday)

A new mural and beer store on Second Avenue and East Sixth Street (Monday)

Shorty's eyeing former Bodhi Tree space on Third Avenue (Friday)

Look at 137 Avenue C now (Tuesday)

Maybe reporting excessive Airbnb works (Monday)

About community Wi-Fi in the East Village (Tuesday)

Asbestos removal underway at Peter Brant's incoming gallery space on East Sixth Street (Thursday)

It's Hitchcocktober! (Thursday)

Bleecker Street charmer has a chance to look like its pricy condo neighbors (Friday)

East Village Cheese opens (Tuesday)

Madina Deli Shop opens in former Reciprocal Skateboards space on East 11th Street (Friday)

East Village home prices are up by 38% since 2004 (Wednesday)

and spotted waiting for the 4-5-6 train at Union Square yesterday…


[Photo by @Doug_e_Doug]

St. Stanislaus on 7th Street represents in the 78th annual Pulaski Day Parade



In case you are just waking up or watching the Jets game in London … today is the 78th annual Pulaski Day Parade in New York City. This year's theme: "Polish-American Businesses and Leaders, the Building of America."

As always, St. Stanislaus on East Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue took part in the parade… EVG Senior Float Photographer Derek Berg provided these shots of the church's 2015 edition.

A look at the Ray's Candy Store photo exhibit



You have two more days to catch "At Ray’s: Connection Is Why We’re Here," the photography exhibit highlighting Ray's Candy Store on Avenue A by Whitney Browne.

EVG regular Peter Brownscombe stopped by the gallery space at 103 Allen St. and Delancey yesterday (the opening was Thursday night)...









Gallery hours today are 2-8 p.m. … and Monday, 6-9 p.m.

Find more details here. The exhibit is co-presented with miLES.

You can read our Q-and-A with Browne here.

Headless man, walking backwards, ready for colder weather



Happy early Halloween … Photo Thursday by Russell Atwood (author of "Losers Live Longer") on Second Avenue between East Seventh Street and East Sixth Street…

Saturday, October 3, 2015

The coast is clear...



Tompkins Square Park today by Bobby Williams...

Replacing and extending some water mains on the Bowery



Meant to note last week the start of the water main upgrade on the Bowery between East Fourth Street and Great Jones …



Tried to find a completion date for this via the DDC website… came up with this… a June 2019 timeline.



That's probably for the entire Bowery project (though it is conceivable that it could take the city three-plus years just for this block) … the DDC map shows the extension/replacement work going down to Canal.

Chucky's in love at Mikey's



I always like (and actually look forward to seeing now) Andre Trenier's 1980s-inspired murals on the roll-down gate at Mikey Likes It, 199 Avenue A near East 12th Street.

This month it's Charles Lee Ray … aka Chucky from the Academy Award-winning "Child's Play."

And the flavor of the month: Child's Play: spiced pumpkin ice cream with cinnamon streusel, buttered pecan pieces and cheesecake chunks.

Friday, October 2, 2015

Calling all Cars



Seattle's buzzy Car Seat Headrest — basically Will Toledo now with a touring band — has put out 11 self-released records in the past few years. No. 12, "Teens of Style," is arriving later this month via Matador.

And Toledo/the band will be playing several shows here for CMJ, including Oct. 15 at the Cake Shop on Ludlow.

The video is for a new track called "Something Soon."

The historic Charlie Parker Residence is for sale on Avenue B



The listing for 151 Avenue B between East Ninth Street and East 10th Street arrived on Streeteasy today. (Halstead is the broker, though the link appears not to work at the moment.)

Built circa 1849 and bordering Tompkins Square Park to the East, individually designated by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, The Charlie Parker Residence is a rare example of a Gothic Revival style townhouse. Original details include the double wood doors, a trefoil relief beneath the projecting box cornice, slender hood moldings above most windows and the well-preserved pointed archway with clustered colonettes that is surmounted by a prominent horizontal molding.

There are 4 full-floor apartments: Garden floor, former home of Jazz great, Charlie Parker, Parlor floor, the third floor and fourth floors, each with 2 bedrooms. The Penthouse, with a huge private deck, is set-back with 1 bedroom and extra loft space. Handled with care throughout the years, this elegant building holds court in the vibrant neighborhood of the East Village.

It also has the honor of 3 designations: The New City Landmarks Preservation Foundation, The State Register of Historic Places and The National Register of Historic Places. The archway is featured in Bricks and Brownstones by Charles Lockwood. Great for investors OR it can be converted into an owner's duplex with income or single family.

Price: $9.25 million.

According the Charlie Parker Residence website, Parker lived here from 1950-1954. "With Chan Richardson and their three children, Parker occupied the ground floor apartment at the height of his career."

Image via Wikepedia Commons

EV Grieve Etc.: Extell sues over construction delays; OddFellows turns to ice cream sandwiches


[Wednesday on St. Mark's Place by Derek Berg]

Extell suing East 13th Street neighbor over construction delays (Town & Village)

6 months without gas for cooking in building on Second Avenue and East Sixth Street (NBC New York)

Maps shows the availability of remaining air rights in NYC (Curbed)

On East Fourth Street, OddFellows will now just serve ice cream sandwiches (Grub Street)

Another look at East Village Radio's return (The Guardian)

Harry & Ida’s on Avenue A "turning out some of the best pastrami in town" (BloombergBusiness)

The erosion of the neighborhood bar (The Awl)

Honorary street names along First Avenue (Off the Grid)

So long to Sounds — and St. Mark's Place (Flaming Pablum)

The International Center of Photography pushes opening on the Bowery back to the spring (BoweryBoogie)

Robert Sietsema tests the new menu at the former Yunnan Kitchen on Clinton Street (Eater)

An interview with writer Eileen Myles (The Guardian)

Museum of Chinese in America celebrates Chinatown's architecture through the years (The Lo-Down)

Jonathan Ames doesn't really miss NYC anymore (The Village Voice)

A look at Billy Name’s Warhol-era photos (Dangerous Minds)

Photographer Miron Zownir has just published NYC RIP, a collection of photographs capturing the "day-to-day lunacy" of New York City in the 1980s (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

... and our apologies for not noting that Chest of Pleasure is now open at 31 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue...


[Photo by Steven]

They opened in late August, and sell things like the (waterproof) Neon Luv Touch Mini Mite and edible massage oils.

Updated 10/3

The Harvest Post has been postponed until next Saturday, Oct. 10.

... and tomorrow it's the return of the 6 B Garden Harvest Fest (rain date Sunday) ... on Avenue B between East Sixth Street and East Fifth Street...


Desire to panic shop wanes as Joaquin expects to head out to sea


[EVG file photo of Key Food]

From DNAinfo:

Forecasters are now predicting Hurricane Joaquin will veer offshore into the Atlantic and miss the city completely.

That means the five boroughs will barely get any Joaquin-related rain or wind — a huge improvement on the doomsday scenario city officials had been preparing for.

“It’s tracking far enough [away] we shouldn’t even see winds,” said National Weather Service spokeswoman Carlie Buccola.

Despite this, forecasters still predicted long lines at Trader Joe's just because it's the weekend and stuff.

Shorty's eyeing former Bodhi Tree space on 3rd Avenue

The folks behind Shorty’s Authentic Philly Steaks & Sandwiches are planning to open their fifth NYC location at 58 Third Ave. between East 10th Street and East 11th Street.

According to the application (PDF!) on file at the CB3 website ahead of this month's SLA committee meeting, the bar-restaurant would be open 11 a.m. to 3 a.m. seven days a week. The paperwork shows a configuration with 19 tables — good for 34 seats, and a bar with a 10-seat capacity.

There are currently Shorty's located on Madison Avenue in the Flatiron District, Pearl Street in the Financial District, First Avenue on the Upper East Side and the first location, which opened in 2006, on Ninth Avenue by Port Authority.

Here's New York magazine with a rundown of the Ninth Avenue location:

[T]he sports-bar-like space—glammed up with red walls and chrome tables—features 20 brews on tap and several plasma TVs, making it a convenient place to catch a post-work game. But the main attraction is the thinly sliced sirloin cheesesteak served in true Philadelphia fashion: on a freshly baked hoagie (shipped in from Philly) with fried onions and plenty of cheese. You can choose provolone, American, or the classic Whiz. Other guilt-inducing menu options include the roast pork special, burgers, and sides like cheese fries, fried mozzarella triangles, and wings.

And!

Just don’t expect to have a quiet conversation: In addition to simultaneous sports-game screenings, a D.J. spins from his laptop.

Bodhi Tree, a Thai restaurant, quietly closed after nearly six years in late July.

The SLA committee meeting is Oct. 19 at the CB3 office, 59 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

Madina Deli Shop opens in former Reciprocal Skateboards space on East 11th Street


[Photo by Shawn Chittle]

The deli is just getting up and running here on 11th Street just east of First Avenue… in one of the storefronts that previously housed Reciprocal Skateboards.

Reciprocal closed in March after five-plus years in business. In a Facebook post, owner Jon Eastman wrote: "We are unfortunately completely out of resources to continue operating any further. And by resources, I mean money."