Monday, March 7, 2016

Updated: Flywheel Sports debuts Thursday at 51 Astor Place



Classes at the indoor cycling studio start Wednesday Thursday morning over at 51 Astor Place, according to the Flywheel Sports website.

This location — the 11th Flywheel in the metropolitan area — features a stadium-seating studio with more than 70 bikes ... and is conveniently located next to a CVS.

Updated 3/9

We originally understood that the studio opens today (based on the class schedule on the Flywheel website)... Flywheel reps are out on Astor Place today... the first class is free...


[Photo by Vinny & O]

Previously on EV Grieve:
3 retail spaces available at 51 Astor Place (22 comments)

You can finally shop at 51 Astor Place!

3 new retail tenants for 51 Astor Place: Bluestone Lane Coffee, Chop’t and Flywheel Sports

Chopping soon signage up at the Death Star

Here's the Bluestone Lane Coffee signage at 51 Astor Place

Spin cycle: Flywheel Sports opening next month in 51 Astor Place

Former bar turns into an architect's office



In recent years, 448 E. 13th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue has been home to several bars, including Mugs and, until January 2015, M. White.

Now, rather amazingly, the space has been converted into use as an...


[Reader submitted]

... architect's office for Davies Tang + Toews...


[Reader submitted]

No word if they will seek a liquor license... just for something to pair with the renderings...

H/T DWG

Sunday, March 6, 2016

[Updated] Report of a fire at 133 E. 7th St.; Yuca Bar remains closed


[Photo by Shawn Chittle]

There were reports of a fire at 133 E. Seventh St. at Avenue A just before 6 this evening...


[SC]


[Mark Cyr]


[MC]

The FDNY was on it quickly...


[Photo by Perri Silver]


[Reader submitted]


[Reader submitted]


[Photo by Vinny & O]


[V&O]

About 30 minutes after the initial report, the fire was under control, per the FDNY...



Updated 7:35

The FDNY remains on the scene... Yuca Bar is closed... there's broken glass all over the sidewalk... Avenue A is closed off at St Mark's Place and East Sixth Street... and there's no through traffic on East Seventh Street...





As of this moment, there isn't any information on the cause or extent of the damage...

Updated 9:49 p.m.

Word from the scene is that a candle in an apartment started the fire. There weren't any reports of injuries.

Updated 7:30 a.m.

Here's a look at the East Seventh Street side of the building... firefighters needed to break the windows on the upper floors ...



Updated 4:50 p.m.

Ground-floor tenant Yuca Bar is closed tonight...



The dining room is also empty at the moment. It appears that the restaurant sustained some damages too...



Updated 6:15 p.m.


[Photo this evening by Steven]

Week in Grieview


[Wish you were here outside Toy Tokyo, photo by Derek Berg]

Jared Kushner's residents at 118 E. Fourth St. would like gas for cooking and some heat (Thursday)

City changes way it will treat people drinking or urinating (or both) in public (Thursday)

The Stage Restaurant will not be reopening (Wednesday) Fake NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene sign at Stage takes aim at landlord Icon Realty (Wednesday)

"Gentrification in Progress" tape arrives at former Trash & Vaudeville and Stage Restaurant spaces (Thursday)

Cops storm East Ninth Street, apparently find nothing (Thursday)

Final visits to five downtown businesses (Tuesday)

Krystal's Cafe 81 has closed for good on East Seventh Street (Thursday)

At the Parkside Lounge's new back room (Friday)

NYC Velo cycling to new storefront next door on Second Avenue (Friday)

Two beverage distributors depart East Second Street. What next for the spaces? (Wednesday)

Baiting the former Chase branch on Second Avenue for rats ahead of demolition (Friday)

The Calyx has been branded on Avenue C (Tuesday)

Out and About with Annie Ju and Melissa Scott, owners of an.mé /ahn-may on East Ninth Street (Wednesday)

Developers buy former LES nursing facility on Rivington for luxury housing (Monday)

Hakata Hot Pot (RIP Sushi Lounge) has moved on St. Mark's Place (Thursday)

The former Russian Souvenirs will become a coffee shop on East 14th Store (Monday)

Banana Leaf closes on East Sixth Street (Wednesday)

Take a chance on living in a rent-stabilized apartment in Stuy Town (Tuesday)

A branch of the Southern California-based Sugared+Bronzed salon (Monday)

Tacos in the works for East Second Street (Monday)

Maybe Fairway won't be coming to the East Village (Tuesday)

East Seventh Street maintaining rep for stunt parking (Wednesday)

100 Avenue A reps say that 100 Avenue A is already 50-percent sold (Thursday)

How about a new smoke shop for East Houston (Monday)

... and the last of the fake movie snow has been packed up on East Fourth Street...


[Photo by Derek Berg]

Monster Track 2016



The 17th annual street race (brakeless, fixed gear) started yesterday in Tompkins Square Park...







Photos by Derek Berg

Mystery Noah Baumbach project filming this week on a street near you



If you're a Noah Baumbach fan, then you may be interested in knowing the the filmmaker ("Mistress America," "Frances Ha," "The Squid and the Whale") will be in the and around the neighborhood this week working on his next project, "Yen Din Ka Kissa," according to posted flyers ...





As for the mystery, well, there doesn't appear to be much online (such as on his IMDB profile) about YDKK, described on the flyer on East Fifth Street and Cooper Square as a film that "tells the story of an estranged New York family coming together in preparation of artist & patriarch Harold's career retrospective."

Film crews will be around tomorrow (Monday!) and Tuesday on East Fifth Street between Second Avenue and the Bowery... East Fourth Street between Second Avenue and First Avenue... East Sixth Street between Second Avenue and and First Avenue... Lafayette between Bond and Bleecker...

Saturday, March 5, 2016

A question on the extra lights and police presence along Avenue D



Photos and email from an EVG reader...

Any word on the reason for the heavy police presence along Avenue D & FDR Drive as well as the assemblage of generator lighting throughout Jacob Riis Houses?



Reader report: Man throws trashcan into 7-Eleven's front window on Avenue A



Around 8:30 this morning, an EVG reader said that a man, who was believed to be homeless, threw a city trashcan into the front window of the 7-Eleven store on Avenue A and East 11th Street. His motive was unclear. Police were quickly on the scene, though it wasn't known if they had any suspects.

Oh hi, there's a hole here


[Last Sunday]

Last Sunday, we noted the sinkhole in the works on Avenue A at East Third Street. It had already eaten a pylon, and was on its way to becoming a rare 5 Pyloner and potential film franchise for Dwayne Johnson.

Anyway, EVG reader John Iz shared these photos showing the developments here this past week... and the DOT's various attempts to warn vehicular traffic of the hole in the Avenue...

Tuesday!



Wednesday!



Thursday!



Friday! (Yesterday!)



What else might the DOT place here to warn motorists of the sinkhole?

Updated:

John shared photos from the hole from Saturday...



...with bonus shot of the can of spray paint used to mark the perimeter...

Logos Urbana at the 2nd Avenue F stop



Just checking out the final mural by BluDog10003 outside the Second Avenue F stop at East Houston ... The mural is called Logos Urbana...

And here's another angle via BluDog10003...

Friday, March 4, 2016

A band called Eerie Wanda



Amsterdam quartet Eerie Wanda released their first record, "Hum," last week on Brooklyn's Beyond Beyond Is Beyond Records.

And you can catch their U.S. debut Monday night at the Cake Shop on Ludlow Street.

EV Grieve Etc.: Metrograph debuts; gas shutoffs surge


[Photo of Lucy's last night by @JustAnotherRich]

A look at the Metrograph, the new cinema-bookstore-bar-restaurant on Ludlow Street that opens today (Time Out ... Indie Wire ...The New York Times)

A surge of gas shutoffs in NYC, particularly for rent-stabilized tenants (NYPress)

An ode to St. Mark's Bookshop (Literary Hub)

The mating continues in Tompkins Square Park (for the hawks!) (Laura Goggin Photography)

Arlene Gottfried’s vintage pictures of the Lower East Side (The New York Times)

Renderings of the Ace Hotel coming to the Bowery (BoweryBoogie)

A review of the opening program at the Avant Music Festival, on through tomorrow at the Wild Project on East Third Street (The New York Times)

Updates on the battle to replace Sheldon Silver in the 65th Assembly District (The Lo-Down)

Dee Dee Ramone book reissues arrive (Alternative Press)

Restoring St. Peter’s on West 20th Street (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Revisiting Lou Reed's "Take No Prisoners" and West Fourth Street (Flaming Pablum)

Tomorrow (Saturday!) afternoon, author-artist Sally Eckhoff's reads from "F*ck Art, Let's Dance! An East Village Memoir" an the Mulberry Street branch of the NYPL:

This memoir, by a former Village Voice writer and critic, is a cockeyed personal history of the East Village — a place nobody moved to on purpose. This is a short stretch of history, to be sure, framed as it is on one side by the Summer of Sam and on the other by the Tompkins Square Park riots, two notorious incidents that defined an age. The naive protagonist's lies, dreams, and daily blunders, overcome in places only by spectacular acts of will, might remind you of what it feels like to be a beginner in a land of crooks and geniuses. And because there’s nothing everyday about everyday people in New York, the citizens that appear on these pages, whether shy or brazen, upright or felonious, are always new.

Find details here.

That time this year it snowed on March 4



East 10th Street at Avenue C this morning via Bobby Williams...

At the Parkside Lounge's new back room


[Photo by James and Karla Murray]

Words and photos (except where noted) by EVG contributor Stacie Joy

I recently stopped by The Parkside Lounge, 317 E. Houston at Attorney Street, to talk with co-owner Christopher Lee about the newly renovated back-room lounge and accompanying brand-new bar.



Lee started bartending at this Lower East Side mainstay in 2003, and became co-owner (joining Karen Waltermire) in 2009. Originally from Natchitoches, La., Lee says he knew the minute he walked into the long-standing bar it was the place for him.

Here, he discusses the new space and what it took to make it happen.

What is different about the new back room compared to the old space? 

We renovated everything back there with the goal of it being a more inviting space to perform in as well as be more comfortable for our patrons.

The room no longer smells like old stale beer thanks to the new hardwood floors. Just getting rid of the carpet was a big addition. There's a brand new air-conditioning unit and ducts to better regulate our seasonal climate. I love the aesthetic that it brings as well. What used to be something we tried to hide is front and center, shiny and functional.

We took down a non-load-bearing wall to open up the space and make room for our new bar. The room really does feel much bigger now.

Between the new floor and the wall coming down, we were concerned about the acoustics of the space. We’ve had many musicians over the years tell us that the sound in the room was amazing and we didn’t want to mess that up. The carpet that was there didn’t smell very good but it really kept the sound warm. To that end we brought in some super high-tech soundproofing that was installed underneath the new sheetrock (our neighbors appreciated this step as well). We also invested in an updated PA system for the performances back there.

We’ve got new lights to update that aspect of the space. I’m an actor and love seeing people come in and rethink the room for theater. We’ve had a few shows in here recently and I really love it when the playing space isn’t on the stage. Now refocusing lights will be a button click away rather than something we have to manually do before each performance. Flexibility in what you can do as a business is important. With the neighborhood around us in a constant state of flux staying relevant is what keeps our doors open.









What about the bar back there?

We installed a full bar dedicated to the space. This was a big step for us. Between the requirements for the city and the State Liquor Authority (SLA), getting the license alone was a marathon endeavor.

Having bartended for years in high-volume environments, being able to serve a packed room was an important part of the design but we didn’t want it to take over the space either. The wood is beautiful, tough, and fits in perfectly back there. I love perching on the corner back there watching bands over everyone’s heads. It just feels great.

What was involved in making the changes and how long did it take?

Oh dear Lord, I can’t fully answer this. Let me just say that coordinating with City Hall, the SLA, contractors, plumbers, snow storms, and all the other wackiness of New York City, there were always balls up in the air. It took a full two years to get the room renovated and the bar licensed.

You can find a schedule of upcoming events at Parkside's Facebook page here. You can follow them on Twitter here.