Tuesday, October 18, 2016

It is nice out today



10th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B ... via

Oct. 18



Carol from East 5th Street found what appears to be a Christmas/holiday tree... freshly plucked from the Earth (there's still some green on it)...on Fifth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...



Why discard this today? Perhaps the balmy temperatures made it ideal for spring/summer cleaning...

Brooklyn-based Bakeri now serving bread, croissants and coffee on East 6th Street

A photo posted by Bakerita NYC (@bakeritanyc) on


The owners of Bakeri, with locations in Williamsburg and Greenpoint, have just opened a cafe at 627 E. Sixth St. between Avenue B and Avenue C.

The East Village outpost — called Bakerita — carries Bakeri's homemade bread and pastries as well as Counter Culture Coffee.

And here's more about them, via the Bakeri website:

We opened in 2009 with the goal of bringing small batch, European-style bread to our community. We added a small café with homemade pastries and high-quality coffee. Our roots are from Northern Europe but our day-to-day changes depending on what we’re inspired by...

Bakerita is open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Friday; and 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekends.

Another rally to protest the incoming Moxy hotel on 11th Street



As we've been documenting, workers have started the demolition process at 112-120 E. 11th St., where a 300-room hotel is coming for Marriott's Moxy brand.

There's another protest now planned tomorrow evening here between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue. Here are details via the EVG inbox...



Please join GVSHP, union and labor groups, preservationists and neighbors this Wednesday, October 19 at 5:30 pm in front on 112-120 East 11th Street to protest the city’s approval of demolition of these five 19th century Beaux-Arts tenements which formerly housed long-term tenants in affordable housing. These five buildings were ruled “landmark-eligible” by the city in 2008, and yet this summer when they faced the threat of demolition and GVSHP urged they be protected, the city refused, claiming they no longer qualified for landmark status.

What changed? Nothing about the buildings – only the ownership. The buildings had been purchased by the Lightstone Group, whose head was a major campaign contributor to and political ally of Mayor de Blasio, whom he had recently appointed to the city’s Economic Development Corporation.

In spite of the Mayor’s purported dedication to affordable housing, he is allowing the buildings to be demolished to make way for a ‘millennials’-oriented Moxy Hotel. And in spite of the Mayor’s purported commitment to organized labor, the developer has been using companies on the project with a history of wage theft, unsafe practices, and mistreatment of workers, and the demolition and construction as well as the planned hotel will use non-union labor. As a result, organized labor is joining us in our campaign against this development, which we also protested this August.

Previously on EV Grieve:
At the rally outside 112-120 E. 11th St.

Protest reminder about 112-120 E. 11th St.; plus concerns over asbestos removal

6-building complex on East 10th Street and East 11th Street sells for $127 million

Report: 300-room hotel planned for East 11th Street

Preservationists say city ignored pitch to designate part of 11th Street as a historic district

Permits filed to demolish 5 buildings on 11th Street to make way for new hotel (58 comments)

New building permits filed for 13-story Moxy Hotel on East 11th Street across from Webster Hall

There will be several eating-drinking choices at the incoming Moxy hotel on 11th Street

Chipping away 112-120 E. 11th St. to make way for a Moxy hotel

122 2nd Ave., home of the Ukrainian Sports Club, being pitched for retail or a restaurant



The retail/restaurant for rent sign has arrived outside 122 Second Ave. between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place.

According to the listing, two levels are available in the space whose current tenants include the Ukrainian Sports Club.

Here are more details (PDF here) via KSR Realty:

• Floors can be leased together or separately
• Incredible East Village retail opportunity
• Landlord will install ventilation
• Ownership is installing new façade
• Close proximity 400,000 SF office tower at 51 Astor Place
• Consistent foot traffic with St. Mark’s Place and Astor Place steps away
• Adjecent to Orpheum Theater

And here's a conceptual rendering showing the possibilities...



This is not the first time this space has been available. As we reported in January 2011, the two floors were going for an asking rent of $26,500. The retail-restaurant plans never materialized at that time. There isn't any mention of the asking rent today.

As previously noted, La Mama Experimental Theater Company was here until 1969.

The storefront at 332 Bowery, current home of Intermix, is for lease



There's a new listing for 332 Bowery between Bond and Great Jones... the space currently houses Intermix, but the multi-brand fashion retailer is apparently looking to sublease the space, per the listing at RKF. (The rent is arranged, and the sublease is through 2022.)

Until September 2012, the address was home to Steve's on the Bowery, which had been around 30-plus years. Intermix opened in May 2013.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Steve's on the Bowery has closed, more 'glam fashionistas' on the way

Steve's on the Bowery is for lease

Intermix arrives on the Bowery

Timbuk2 now open on Lafayette



On Saturday, the San Francisco-based Timbuk2 opened its first two East Coast retail shops ... in Williamsburg and at 325 Lafayette St. between Bleecker and Houston.

Per their website, "Timbuk2 is a designer and manufacturer of Made in San Francisco custom and ready-made bags and accessories. Our cycling roots and love of all things urban inform our design decisions to make products that work hard for you."

The media advisory about the store opening notes that the store will also have a "complimentary bike share program."

Monday, October 17, 2016

Restored 'Taxi Driver' plays Union Square Wednesday for film's 40th anniversary



A restored version of "Taxi Driver" returns to theaters on Wednesday in celebration of the Martin Scorsese-directed film's 40th anniversary.

Per Entertainment Weekly:

The program also includes a 10-minute excerpt from a Q&A with the cast and crew — including director Scorsese, screenwriter Paul Schrader, and star Robert De Niro — recorded at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival and not previously released.

The Taxi Driver restoration, which was overseen by Scorsese and cinematographer Michael Chapman, will also be available on Blu-ray on Nov. 8. Bonus features on the two-disc set include the full 40-minute Tribeca Q&A as well as commentaries, a making-of documentary, storyboards, and animated photo galleries.

There are two screenings on Wednesday — 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. — at the Regal Union Square. Afterwards, you can walk by 13th Street and Third Avenue to spot some "Taxi Driver" filming locations.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Revisiting: East 13th Street and 'Taxi Driver'

Reader report: Man allegedly fondles himself in Tompkins Square Park while staring at 2 women



An East Village writer shared this with us this morning. She wants residents and Parkgoers to be aware of the man:

My friend and I were sitting on a bench in Tompkins Square Park on the Avenue B side of the park just past the dog run talking about 11:30 this morning. We were enjoying the lovely weather when I looked to my left and made eye contact with a man sitting on a bench. He was staring right at me, and I thought maybe I knew him, then he starting moving his hand around his crotch and stuck it up his shorts and started playing with himself. I turned to my friend and asked her to look past me and tell me what she saw, and like me, she saw him staring toward us while he was playing with himself.

I got up and walked over to Avenue B and walked down a bit and re-entered the park so I could walk by him from the other direction and get some good footage of him while my friend remained on the bench. As you can see in the photo, he has a newspaper on his lap and is wearing loose-fitting shorts. I suspect he is an old pro at this.

After I sat back down, he bolted to the middle of the park where he had a bike. He hopped on it and quickly rode out of the park, leaving out of the exit on the corner of Avenue B and East 7th Street.

Renovations underway at Momofuku's Ssäm Bar on 2nd Avenue



An EVG tipster shared these photos from this morning... showing workers cleaning out Momofuku's Ssäm Bar space on Second Avenue at 13th Street...





As Eater reported last month, David Chang's restaurant is closing for a brief renovation — "an update that will include a switch to all chairs with backs, a move away from the Momofuku empire’s design signature." And! "Ssäm Bar’s renovation is being done in conjunction with the restaurant’s 10-year anniversary." They closed after lunch service yesterday.

And as part of all this, the adjacent cocktail bar Booker & Dax closed on Saturday night. The bar owners plan on relocating to a new, standalone space.

The pits: 10th Street and 4th Avenue cleared for new development



On Friday, workers wrapped up the demolition on 10th Street at Fourth Avenue. The crew quickly took down the single-level structure at the southeast corner in August.

However, the turn-of-the-century townhouse at 82 E. 10th St. remained... they seemed to take their time with it for some reason. I watched them slowly raze it over a two-week period.


[Sept. 24]


[Sept. 30]

These photos are from Saturday...







As previously reported, a 10-story retail-residential building is in the works. The approved permit shows retail on the ground floor and 12 dwelling units above. The residential portion encompasses more than 24,000 square feet, so those units will presumably be condos. Floors 2-5 will each have two units while 6-8 will each have one unit while a two-level duplex to top things off.

SBLM Architects are listed as the architects of record. Didn't spot a rendering at their website. However, a search of the address online turned up this rendering... I don't have any idea if this is the actual design still in play here. This comes from a now-broken link at Archinect ...



The history of this stretch includes the Tenth Street Coffeehouse, an artists' hangout run by Mickey Ruskin before he opened Les Deux Megots on Ninth Street and then Max's Kansas City. No. 82 was thought to have housed the Hilda Carmel Gallery in the late 1950s and early 1960s, where the likes of Pollock, Rothko and de Kooning showed their work.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Demo permits filed to raze southeast corner of 4th Avenue and 10th Street

The 'tremendous retail potential' of East 10th Street and 4th Avenue

10 stories of condos in the works for the long-vacant corner of 4th Avenue and East 10th Street

With new building OK'd, corner of 4th Avenue and 10th Street finally ready for razing

Happy No. 17 Black & White



East 10th Street between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue isn't a complete lost cause. No. 86 is home to Black & White ...

...and the bar is celebrating its 17th anniversary this week with some music and a three-night celebration, as seen on the flyer below...



City of Saints is on this block too... I know several people who give their coffee high marks...

Evelyn Drinkery has closed on Avenue C



After four years at 171 Avenue C between 10th Street and 11th Street, Evelyn Drinkery has closed.

An EVG reader shared this email that the owners of the cocktail bar sent out this past Friday...



We understand that new owners will be taking over the space. We will have more on the new tenants once we get some final confirmation.

The space was previously home to TenEleven, a space that we always liked. Never made it to the Drinkery.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Reader report: TenEleven closing at the end of June

What's taking over the TenEleven space on Avenue C

Blink Fitness opens Oct. 25 on Avenue A



According to the guy at the sales office anyway. The gym is at 98 Avenue A between Sixth Street and Seventh Street in the base of Ben Shaoul's 6-story 8-story condoplex.

Previously

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Week in Grieview


[Surge pricing on 7th Street via Derek Berg]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

Renovation work starting at the landmarked Father's Heart Ministry on 11th Street (Tuesday)

The Citibank branch on Avenue A is closing (Wednesday)

The new Beth Israel hospital for the East Village looks pretty bonkers (Tuesday) ... and more details on the new hospital (Thursday)

Report: City claims immunity in tenant lawsuit over deadly Second Avenue gas explosion (Wednesday)

(More) Condos coming soon on East Houston (Monday)

Remembering a fallen NYPD officer on the anniversary of his death (Thursday)

Out and About with Michelle Candela (Wednesday)

Local elected officials asked to vacate longtime office space on First Avenue and 14th Street (Thursday)

New renderings for the luxury building that will hang out over the Mercury Lounge (Thursday)

Report: Babu Ji on Avenue B hit with another wage lawsuit (Thursday)

Empire Biscuit has until Tuesday to pay the back rent or surrender their Avenue A storefront (Wednesday)

Dieci closes on 10th Street (Monday)

More Mosaic light poles arrive at Astor Place (Wednesday)

East Village Burritos & Bar and Apna Masala haven't been open lately (Monday)

Heights + Kenchi moves to 9th Street (Tuesday)

Being Steve Croman (Friday)

Mandolino Pizza coming soon to 13th Street (Monday)

Coming to 'Merica (Friday)

Joey Pepperoni looking closed on First Avenue (Wednesday)

Getting piggy with it: Found heart outside the Riis Houses not human, ME says (Thursday)

Did you lose this cat?



An EVG reader notes that this "very friendly, not feral" cat was found in El Sol Brillante community garden (next to the playground) on 12th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B this morning...



The cat is there now... I also have a phone number if you need to contact someone about the cat...

The Hunter’s Supermoon, night 1


[Photo by Liza Béar]

Let's start by cutting-n-pasting this from National Geographic:

Sky-watchers are gearing up for a super-sized moon that will grace evening skies this Sunday, October 16. The so-called hunter’s supermoon kicks off a lunar triple play happening over the next three months.

This month’s full moon is known in North America as the hunter’s moon. That’s because in other months, the moon rises about 50 minutes later each day, while the October moon rises just 30 minutes later. That offers more light overall during a 24-hour day, which came in handy for traditional hunters. [Ed note: Does this make it paleo?]

This month, the moon officially reaches its full phase at 12:23 a.m. ET (4:23 UT) on October 16, which means that the lunar disk will appear nearly equally full on the nights of both October 15 and 16.

Last night, local astronomy buff Felton Davis has his rig up on Second Avenue and East Houston for some supermoon viewing (top photo) ... Unfortunately, not everyone was buying it...


And here's a view after midnight and early this morning via Bobby Williams...





And why does the moon have a reddish tint in the first photo from Bobby? It's sunburnt, of course.

Via EarthSky:

"The orange colour of a moon near the horizon is a true physical effect. It stems from the fact that - when you look toward the horizon - you are looking through a greater thickness of Earth’s atmosphere than when you gaze up and overhead.

The atmosphere scatters blue light - that’s why the sky looks blue. The greater thickness of atmosphere in the direction of a horizon scatters blue light most effectively, but it lets red light pass through to your eyes. So a full moon near the horizon — any full moon near the horizon — takes on a yellow or orange or reddish hue."

Anyway, keep an eye up tonight... and I believe Felton will be back on Second Avenue and East Houston for a better view...

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Open Cemetery Weekend



This weekend, the New York City Marble Cemetery on Second Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue... and the New York Marble Cemetery on Second Avenue between Second Street and Third Street are open to the public from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

This is part of the whole Open House New York Weekend happening this, uh, weekend. Here's a PDF of the program for the stuff you don't need reservations for to enter.

Noted



For some closure on the Green Day Stencil Promo on Historical Church Fence story... the ad was wiped off/painted over yesterday... not sure who did the work (a church employee? Green Day Idiot Team Nation member? Bille Joe Armstrong?)...



As previously noted, several readers sent emails to the Green Day Idiot Team Nation last week after the ad for the band's 12th album showed up along the fence outside St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery ... and someone there responded:

Thank you for bringing this to our attention, it is being removed immediately.
Thank You,
Green Day - Idiot Nation Team

It took five days, but it was removed here on 11th Street and Second Avenue. Coincidentally (or not!), there is an empty six-pack of Corona at the exact spot where the ads were...

Friday, October 14, 2016

In the City



Revisiting Spacemen 3's "Big City" (Everybody I Know Can Be Found Here)" from 1991.

Card-carrying members of the band likely already know that bassist Will Carruthers has a new memoir out now titled "Playing the Bass With Three Left Hands."

EV Grieve Etc.: Honk tomorrow in Tompkins Square Park; 'Halloween' midnight at the Sunshine


[Photo in Tompkins Square Park by Derek Berg]

Check out the schedule for "HONK for More Gardens!," happening tomorrow in local community gardens ... then 3-6 p.m. in Tompkins Square Park (Official Facebook event page)

A review of iO Tillett Wright’s debut memoir, "Darling Days," about growing up in the East Village in the 1980s (The New York Times)

Tim Lawrence on his new book, "Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor: 1980-1983" (The Wall Street Journal, subscription required)

Man picked up on 6th Street and Avenue D reportedly leaves gun stolen from a South Carolina police department in back seat of cab (DNAinfo)

More about Carmen’s Community Garden on Avenue C (Off the Grid ... previously)


[At East Village Hats on 7th Street via Derek Berg]

Children's Museum nixes move to Essex Crossing (Crain's)

Thoughts on the new Astor Place (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

The campaign for "In Case of Shooting" posters seen in EV stores (Campaign US)

Actress Cynthia Nixon buys East Village co-op (Curbed)

Hansky talks about his new VR exhibit opening tonight on Grand Street (The Lo-Down)

The original "Halloween" plays midnight at the Sunshine this weekend (Official site)

"Ramones Way" Street renaming set for Oct. 30 in Queens (DNAinfo)

Bird watching in the city (Laura Goggin Photography)

And on that topic, EVG reader Michael had a visitor in Stuy Town yesterday — a peregrine falcon...

Being Steve Croman

BloombergBusinessweek files a long read on landlord/developer Steve Croman this week titled "Out With the Poor, In With the Rich: The Landlord’s Guide to Gentrifying NYC."

He is under criminal indictment for mortgage fraud in a probe launched by New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.

In addition, a civil suit alleges that Croman "directs an illegal operation that wields harassment, coercion, and fraud to force rent-regulated tenants out of their apartments and convert their apartments into highly profitable market-rate units."

Croman's criminal case was adjourned until Nov. 29 ... while the civil case begins on Nov. 1.

Croman's real-estate empire includes 47 buildings with 617 units in the East Village. As previously noted, Croman owns more buildings in the East Village than any other landlord.

The Bloomberg piece contains plenty of horror stories from past and present Croman tenants.

“He would remove the washing machines. He tried to close the front door, make everybody go through the basement. He got rid of the super, then had a part-time super who did nothing.”

Even his new market-rate tenants suffer, such as this NYU student:

Sophia offers me a brief tour of her formerly stabilized apartment, telling me that she and her two roommates pay $5,200 a month. The place has been renovated—wine fridge, exposed brick—but in a cheapo, Ikea way. “We just had someone in here fixing our shower,” she says. “We have a dishwasher that’s been broken since we’ve moved in here. Our dryer is, like, total shit. You have to dry things, like, 84 times.” She pauses. “The joke is: Everything is pretty, but nothing actually works.”

And a few more passages:

Sending one landlord to jail won’t turn New York City into a communitarian paradise, of course, but the attorney general’s case against Croman suggests the state is at least eager for gentrification to proceed legally. The city has maintained rent freezes on one-year leases for stabilized apartments for the past few years. Mayor Bill de Blasio has called for the repeal of decontrol loopholes (though the state is unlikely to accede), and has overhauled the zoning code so that many new residential buildings must set aside units for low-income tenants.

But such measures will do nothing to address the seemingly inexhaustible demand from privileged undergrads and Qatari emirs for well-appointed New York apartments. There are those, too, who argue that rent control isn’t worth fighting for—that it artificially suppresses housing supply and creates opportunities for bad actors such as Croman to exploit.

One lawyer who represented tenants in a lawsuit against Croman speculates that the landlord will spend time in prison: “I’m thinking he’s probably going to be living upstate somewhere. They really want to make an example out of him.”

Read the full piece here.

The Earth School Annual Fall Fair is tomorrow (Saturday!)



The Earth School on Sixth Street at Avenue B is holding one of its main fundraising events of the year tomorrow in Tompkins Square Park.

Here are details via the EVG inbox...


Venue address: Tompkins Square Park (Corner of 10th Street and Avenue A)
Event dates and times: Saturday, October 15, 2016, noon-5PM
Event prices: Admission is free, tickets for games and food range from $1 to $5
Age range: Kids 2-12 years, with adult book and rummage sale — and food for all.

This annual celebration of fall is eclectic, has a slew of activities for kids and adults. Kids experience the Amazing Maze, snap a wacky portrait at the photo booth, do a Halloween costume mix-n-match, decorate pumpkins, meet the Pocket Lady with pockets full of mystery prizes, play games including mini-golf, bean bag toss, basketball, get face painting ...

Adults get to taste international foods, both homemade and from East Village restaurants, buy unique gifts, and score a bargain at the extensive rummage and used book sale. Funds raised go to The Earth School.

And some photos from previous years...





Photos by Sonia Benson

This 'Merica life



As you may have heard, there's a restaurant opening at 320 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue called 'Merica.

And tomorrow (Saturday!) is the soft opening day for what has been described as a "tongue-in-cheek eatery" featuring décor that includes rifles, NASCAR memorabilia and non-stop episodes of the Chuck Norris vehicle "Walker, Texas Ranger."

The co-founders are Radoune Eljaouhari, who ran Zerza, the previous restaurant in this space ... and Zach Neil, who operates the Tim Burton-themed Beetle House a few doors away as well as Stay Classy, the bar for Will Ferrell fans on Rivington Street.

Here's part of a preview via DNAinfo:

'Merica ... seeks to transport its diners to the "real America" — or at least a humorous, tongue-in-cheek homage to the idea, decked out with race cars and guns, inspired in part by ... Neil's childhood.

"I spent a good portion of my childhood around the backwood, hillbilly southern Republicans, then I moved to Pennsylvania and grew up next to a NASCAR race track," said Neil.

"Imagine the Donald Trump campaign coming to your backyard every weekend."

And here's a look at the menu via the 'Merica Facebook page...




[Click for a bigger view]

As you will see, there isn't any Kanye West-inspired food. An earlier Facebook post noted an item called The Kanye, described as "fried breast of chicken tossed in a creamy rich Alfredo sauce served over mashed potatoes, then drizzled with a balsamic glaze. This meal will make you into a famous rapper and a narcissistic asshole. Ask the public to loan you the money for it. $18."

Neil told Patch.com that "The Kanye" wasn’t really going to be on the menu, that it was just posted on Facebook for "shock value." (That post was later removed.)

Gothamist summed up the whole operation this way:

It's basically this Simpsons clip of the time they went to Japan's Americatown, but somehow real life ...



Previously on EV Grieve:
USA today: 'Merica NYC signage arrives (69 comments)

Zerza has closed on 6th Street; Merica NYC coming soon? (17 comments)

About 'Merica NYC (40 comments)

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Thursday's parting shot



Heading all the way back to today's spectacular sunrise...photo from the East Village via James and Karla Murray...

Remembering a fallen NYPD officer on the anniversary of his death



A ceremony took place today in honor of slain NYPD officer Brian Jones at PSA 4 on Avenue C at Eighth Street.

Jones, a four-year veteran Housing Bureau officer, who was assigned to PSA 4, was off duty when he was shot and killed while attempting to interview a robbery suspect on Oct. 13, 1996. He was 27.

Today, his family members were on hand for a plaque dedication ceremony at PSA 4...




Thanks to EVG reader Peter D. for the photos.

Blink Fitness getting its Blink Fitness signage on Avenue A



Happening this afternoon at 98 Avenue A between Sixth Street and Seventh Street.

Signs on the windows say the gym is opening at the end of this month. Workers started carting in the machinery on Monday.

Memberships are, for now, $20 a month with $1 annual membership ... the membership office arrived at 115 Avenue A in late August. You can stop by Ray's for fried Oreos afterwards.

The gym is the retail tenant in Ben Shaoul's surrounding condoplex.

And two more shots via Peter Brownscombe...