Friday, October 9, 2015

Indian-speciality movie rental shop closes on East 6th Street


[EVG file photo]

The rental shop that specialized in Indian music and Bollywood cinema has closed at 343 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

EVG reader Michael Hirsch hears that the 12-year-old shop was unable to remain open after a rent increase. (Neighbor Gandhi also closed due to a reported rent hike.)

This is also the last retail space that rented films in the East Village.

[Updated] 4 bedroom rentals arrive at 329 E. 10th St.



The renovations are apparently winding down at 329 E. 10th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. The first units from the Icon Realty-owned building recently arrived on Streeteasy.

For now there are two, four-bedroom units for rent ($8,500 a month), according to Streeteasy.

Here is the listing for the units: "All apartments are newly renovated featuring: bleached-plank hardwood floors, recessed lighting, granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, cherry wood cabinets, crown and baseboard moldings, with marble bathrooms."



There is also a large private patio, per the listings.



However, there isn't any mention of a roof deck (a popular amenity in Icon-owned buildings)… which was in view from the street ...


[Photo from July via JL]

And here's how the new deck was looking from the rear…




[Photos from July via Gojira]

The building, which sits in the East Village/Lower East Side Historic District, needs approval from the Landmarks Preservation Commission for the rooftop addition. It does not appear that any approval was ever received for the roof deck.

DOB records show that someone filed a complaint about the rooftop on June 30. An inspector made an attempt to access the building without success then on Set. 5 and Sept. 12. With no response to the buzzer, the DOB issued an LS-4 — a letter to the landlord asking to schedule an inspection.

Icon picked up the building for $5.2 million in August 2013.

Updated 9:54 a.m.

A neighbor sent along a few better shots showing the roof deck...



...which kind of looks like a cattle stockade from this angle...



Updated 10:39 a.m.

Per another reader...

Actually the deck is no longer visible from street level. They took down the southern fence, receded it by about 5 feet, and put in a shorter fence. Not sure if that brought them into compliance but that is what they did. The marble floor still extends nearly to the roottop edge.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

A family continues to feel the loss on 2nd Avenue



The following is from photographers James and Karla Murray today...

Nicholas Figueroa's father tends to his son's memorial at 121 Second Ave., the site of the March 26 gas explosion and fire that killed his son.

His mother talked to us about the loss of their 23-year-old son and how hard it has been coping with it.

Today, his father placed a statue of Mary and keepsake box at the memorial and also tended to the memorial for the other victim, Moises Ismael Locón Yac.

Mrs. Figueroa gave her OK to post the above photo because she doesn't want anyone to forget the tragedy. Per the Murrays: "Their feelings of anger and loss are still understandably very raw and intense."

[Updated] Report: Black Seed bagels opens Monday on 1st Avenue


[Photo yesterday by Steven]

Zagat is reporting that Black Seed bagels will be opening on Monday at 176 First Ave. between East 10th Street and East 11th Street...

Workers have been renovating the former DeRobertis space these past seven months. Zagat also has the first photos of the renovated interior...



Per Zagat: "[R]estored original details include the tin ceiling, penny tiled floor, neon sign and tile walls, accented with the same turquoise high-top chairs used at [Black Seed's] Elizabeth Street location."

Aside from a variety of bagel sandwiches, Black Seed will reportedly be selling sides like chilled borscht soup and wood-roasted potato salad. They will also be serving pastries such as rugalach and rainbow cookies.

No word yet on hours. The Elizabeth Street location is open daily from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Updated 10-9

Eater has a preview here with lots more photos. They say that BS will be open in the middle of next week. And Grub Street has a preview here. (GS says they will be open on Monday.)

And here is the menu (PDF!) via GS…


[Click to go big]

Previously on EV Grieve:
Black Seed bringing bagels to the former DeRobertis space on 1st Avenue (43 comments)

Black Seed owners reiterate commitment to preserving the former DeRobertis space

A rental with everything but the kitchen sink (no, really)



On Monday, Curbed pointed out a cute East Ninth Street one-bedroom rental with a kitchen shower. Going rate: $2k a month. The catch: There may not actually be a bathroom in the unit. (The listing didn't mention one.)

Which brings us to a one-bedroom unit at 328 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue. Per the above photo, looks like there are new kitchen appliances in the space. No sign of a sink, though.

Let's look more closely at the listing (all sic):

This East Village 1 bedroom offers a gnerous space and lots of light on a charming tree lined east village block, on the 3rd floor of a well kept walkup building, this is the best deal for the dollar in this hood. The apartment has the shower and sink in the living space, they are new and well kept.

So there you go, there is a sink! Somewhere! (Funny that toilet wasn't mentioned...)

Asking price: $1,900.

Purple Ginger out, Kin Asian Bistro is in on East 6th Street


[Photo by Andrew T. Foster]

Purple Ginger, which served a variety of classic Thai, Chinese and Japanese dishes at 507 E. Sixth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B, is no more.

EVG reader/Purple Ginger regular Andrew T. Foster told us the other day that the family who ran the place the past three-plus years sold the business to a company with several Chinese/Thai fusion places in Long Island City.

Per Andrew: "Too bad. The family who ran Purple Ginger was really cool and the food was great."

And just like that the new signage is up for Kin Asian Bistro...



The restaurant wasn't open for the day when we stopped by, so we didn't get a chance to take a look at the menu. The owners are on this month's CB3/SLA committee meeting docket for a new liquor license. However, this item will not be heard before the committee.

According to the questionnaire (PDF!) on file at the CB3 website, Kin Asian Bistro's hours will be 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday … until 11:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

A barber shop is coming soon to East 2nd Street



The signage recently arrived here at 174 E. Second St. between Avenue A and Avenue B… in one of the long-empty storefronts. Don't have any info about the place at the moment. The sign reads "Cut. Shave. Care."

This is the first retail tenant to take a space here since Jared Kushner bought 170-174 E. Second St. in December 2013.

Previously on EV Grieve:
'Most uses considered' for 3 retail spaces at Kushner's 170 E. 2nd St.

Residents continue to speak out about living conditions in Jared Kushner's 170-174 E. 2nd St.

Hitchcocktober movie of the week: 'Shadow of a Doubt'



Hitchcocktober continues tonight at the Village East Cinema on Second Avenue at East 12th Street.

Tonight at 8! "Shadow of a Doubt."



Do you know the world is a foul sty?

And upcoming:

Oct. 15 — "North by Northwest"

Oct. 22 — "Marnie"

Oct. 29 — "Rear Window"

You can buy advance tix online here.

Hey, it's National Pierogi Day

In observance of National Pierogi Day today, Veselka is serving an order (any variety) for $5 all day long.

The restaurant on Second Avenue and East Ninth Street makes 3,000 pierogis by hand every day (according to Veselka).

Or maybe you could pick some up to take home from East Village Meat Market on Second Avenue... and Polish G. I. Delicatessen on First Avenue.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

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. James is traveling this week. East Village photographer Stacie Joy compiled today's post.



By Stacie Joy
Name: Elsie Flores
Occupation: Court Advocate at Andrew Glover Youth Program and Manhattan Criminal Court at 100 Centre Street
Location: Andrew Glover Youth Program, 100 Avenue B
Time: 3:24 pm, Monday, Oct. 5

I was born in Guayama, Puerto Rico, and came over to the East Village/Lower East Side when I was 6 months old with my mother. I grew up in the Lower East Side, and still live there today.

I got involved with Andrew Glover Youth Program (AGYP) after they helped me with my legal matters. I was arrested three times when I was younger — once for a direct sale of narcotics, once for an observed sale and once for grand larceny. I walked into the program center to visit a friend, and [executive director] Angel Rodriguez took an interest in my case. I used to hang out here with a friend of mine.

AGYP helped me when I needed help, with support, guidance and showing me the right way. Unfortunately, my mom was too caught up in alcohol and drugs, I have no father and my sisters and brothers were all adopted. So I had nobody. There was no support system. I had some neighbors that were lovely, but I was too caught up in the streets and making that easy money to stop. Money was so easy as a child — I wasn’t even 13 and I sold and dealt and did what I had to survive until I found out I was pregnant.

That turned my life around. I wanted to give my daughter a better life than I had. I wanted to show her the right way, not the wrong way. My mother never had a job, so I had to learn what it meant to go to school, to go to college, to provide for my daughter. I then decided I wanted to give back. I know how it is to have nobody, to have nothing. I know how it feels to be misguided and how easy it is to get into negative activities. But you know that money, as fast as it comes, is as fast as it goes.

The neighborhood has changed a lot since I was a kid! I don’t know if I can say it’s changed for the better, I feel like now it’s targeting a certain race or class of people. Everything is so expensive now between the bars, restaurants, rent and stores. Some things are just nicer but unaffordable. I feel like they are pushing out the minorities, those who grew up here. I feel pressure, pressure to step up my game.

So I won’t become a statistic, which they would love to see. I will continue to do what I do, which is work hard, stay away from illegal activities and negativity. I try to talk to people in the community in a positive way, show support and give advice, any way possible to help youth in trouble. I assist young people who have been through what I have been through. And since I was once where they are, I know their tricks and can spot their untruths.

The majority of the kids come here with legal problems. Being arrested and needing help with the court system. We work with legally appointed attorneys to help these kids (ages 13 to 21) with tickets, court dates, drug issues, etc. A lot of kids don’t know their rights. No one is teaching them or educating them about their rights. These kids don’t know how the system works, and we are here to assist them, teach them, and help them get on the correct path. We tell them what they can and cannot do, what might happen. We help them by maintaining an 8 p.m. curfew for them, making sure they are at school every day, and that they pass their drug screens and tests.

When a young person is unable to make bail, he or she stays in jail, which is not the answer. AGYP does not provide bail money for these defendants, and so we are working to change this law as well. AGYP won’t help kids who have been charged with murder or rape or who have a very very long rap sheet of prior violent predicates. Most of the kids who come to the program come with drug arrests, theft, prostitution and gambling, low-level crimes and are first-time offenders.

For AGYP to not accept someone, he or she needs to be extremely violent with a long list of prior violent arrests. Andrew Glover Youth program has an amazingly low recidivism rate, somewhere along the lines of 3 percent. The program aims to take criminals off the streets, offer help and guidance as well as support. But not blind trust. We check up on them every day, help them the best way we can.

Officer Andrew Glover was a local East Village police officer who was murdered during the commission of his duties in the mid-1970s. Andrew Glover and NYU poli-sci student Robert Siegal were friends, who always spoke about making this program for kids, for the community. When Robert Siegal died, Angel Rodriguez [his friend, who was also acting as intermediate director at the local Boys Club] stepped in, and seamlessly took over. Angel Rodriguez didn’t hesitate, named the program after Officer Glover, and Angel is now my bossman!

A typical day for me is heading to criminal or family court in the morning with clients, taking clients to school, to doctor’s appointments, to psychiatric evaluation or drug testing, then coming into the Avenue B office to help handle any and all legal matters the best way we can. Since we mandate a strict curfew, I then spend my evenings catching up with them. I could be making a home visit. Also, in the evenings, we provide supervision here at the Avenue B location, where kids check in, learn new skills, and receive counseling.

Condos at former East 6th Street synagogue will start at just under $3 million


[EVG photo from 2013]

There's now a teaser website for the three condos that are being built at the former Congregation Mezritch Synagogue at 415 E. Sixth St.

Unfortunately, there's not much info there… except for the slogan: "History reimagined … For modern living" and some contact info.

And there's a rendering of sorts… which also shows the new top floor…



At the time when the condo plans were first made available several years back, some neighbors and preservationists were concerned about the size and scope of the new level.

As for pricing, the sign that arrived outside the under-renovation building notes that the condos start at $2.95 million…



As previously cut-n-pasted: The landmarked building between Avenue A and First Avenue was reportedly in disrepair and the congregation's population had dwindled. Synagogue leaders signed a 99-year lease with East River Partners worth some $1.2 million. The synagogue will retain some space on the ground floor for their use.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Plan to add condos to historic East Sixth Street synagogue back on

Play spot the potential penthouse atop the East Village synagogue

A final look inside the Anshei Meseritz synagogue on East Sixth Street

Stained-glass windows removed ahead of condo conversion at Congregation Mezritch Synagogue

Another A for Ray



EVG regular Peter Brownscombe reports that Ray has retained his A rating after the completion of his long-awaited Health Department sanitary inspection yesterday at Ray's Candy Store, 113 Avenue A.

The good DOH news continues since those darks days in May 2011.

MoRUS extends Adam Purple memorial show through Oct. 25


[Photo via MoRUS/Facebook]

The Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space (MoRUS) will continue its memorial exhibit honoring Adam Purple, the environmentalist and urban gardening pioneer, who died on Sept. 14 at age 84.

Here's the info via the EVG inbox...


Due to increasing levels of interest from the public about Adam and the history of community gardens, MoRUS will extend The Adam Purple Memorial Show, which includes rare photos of The Garden of Eden, memorabilia and rare footage of the garden and Adam appearing in his Purple attire on several talk shows, including "Live With Regis and Kathie Lee," through Sunday, Oct. 25.

Among special events tied-in with the Purple pop-up include a screening of the award-winning documentary, "Dirt," shot and produced by David Evans, Maria Liedholm Holter and Catherine Williamson Duncumb in the mid-1990s. When "Dirt" was recognized by the International Documentary Association in 1998 and the San Francisco International Film Festival in 1999, it launched global awareness of what the East Village had known for years: community gardens breathe life and pump vitality into marginalized neighborhoods.

"Dirt" will screen at MoRUS on Thursday, Oct. 8, 7 p.m.

MoRUS is at 155 Avenue C between East Ninth Street and East 10th Street. The suggested donation for the screening is $5, but no one will be turned away. Donations will support the preservation of Adam's history through photographs, videos and other artifacts.

Purple — born David Wilkie in Independence, Mo. — garnered international attention in the mid-1980s when he battled the city over a five-lot, 15,000-square-foot garden he created amid the ruins of the Lower East Side.

Previously on EV Grieve:
RIP Adam Purple

The Korean Teachers’ Credit Union now owns 49% of 51 Astor Place, which people still think is in Midtown South



The Real Deal has the story about 51 Astor Place/the IBM Watson Building/Death Star:

The Korean Teachers’ Credit Union recently bought a minority stake in Edward Minskoff’s 51 Astor Place, a deal that values the futuristic-looking Midtown South office property at $600 million. The Seoul-based credit union, which has more than $23 billion in assets under management, paid roughly $113 million to buy a 49-percent stake in the fully leased, 400,000-square-foot building.

Why?

James Yoohoon Jeon of FG Asset Management, which oversees the credit union’s investments in 51 Astor Place, said: "We believe there’s a huge potential for rent increase in Midtown South."

Previously on EV Grieve:
Facebook is moving into the neighborhood; Midtown South expands its boundaries, apparently

Report: Maps show that Midtown South does NOT include the East Village/Astor Place

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Reader report: 'This man stole the keys to my apt. and your building'



An EVG reader sent this along… spotted in the lobby at 233 E. Ninth St. between Second Avenue and Third Avenue … We do not know the backstory…

Today in flying leaps



Photo outside the Pyramid on Avenue A today by Derek Berg

The Red & Gold Boil has closed on St. Mark's Place



After 13 months in business at 30 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue, The Red & Gold Boil has hung up the nets... A sign on the door notes that they closed after service on Sunday...



The place never seemed all that crowded... perhaps the idea of eating fresh crab for $35 on this stretch of St. Mark's Place wasn't so appealing ... ditto for the name — The Red & Gold Boil, which sounded as if it needed to seek medical attention. (Earlier, the place went by Red & Gold Crab Shack.)

Thanks to EVG correspondent Steven for the photos

Previously on EV Grieve:
Breaking: Japadog is closing for good after tonight on St. Mark's Place

Reader report: Crab Shack in the works for former Japadog space on St. Mark's Place

Here is your Red & Gold Crab Shack! signage on St. Mark's Place

When it's time to remove the Mickey Mouse statue with an erection from the Standard East Village



A little earlier today on East Fifth Street at the Bowery... from the rear, it appears that the movers are pushing just another Mickey Mouse statue... but from the front...



Word is Mickey was decor for a party at the East Village Standard... (And is this Andre Saraiva's work?)

Photos by Marjorie Ingall...

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