Saturday, May 12, 2018

Happening today: 'Ecological City 2018 – Procession for Climate Solutions'



"Ecological City 2018 – Procession for Climate Solutions" takes place today in community gardens in the East Village as well as along
the East River.

Here's how the Times described the event:

Ecological City employs mobile sculpture, giant puppets and costumed performers to celebrate conservation, sustainability and solutions to climate change ... the procession will spend the day offering theater, poetry, music and dance at various sites, ending with a river-cleansing ceremony at the waterfront in East River Park.

The procession starts at 11 a.m. (regardless of rain) at the Loisaida Center at 710 E. 9th Street between Avenue C and Avenue D. You can find the full schedule here.

Friday, May 11, 2018

Dream a little Dream



La Luz's new record, Floating Features, is out today... the above video is for "Mean Dream."

Plant and bake sale at the 6 & B Garden this weekend



From noon to 5 p.m. tomorrow (Saturday!) and Sunday.

The community garden is on the southwest corner of Avenue B and Sixth Street.

Sneak preview!

EVG Etc.: ATM robbery on Houston and Lafayette; L-train-shutdown meeting recap


[Photo on 9th Street by Derek Berg]

NYPD looking for this suspect in violent afternoon robbery at the Bank of America ATM on Lafayette and Houston (CBS 2)

At Wednesday night's L-Train-Shutdown Town Hall (Gothamist)

The 2018 Le Petit Versailles garden season has begun. Check out the list of events at the garden on East Houston between Avenue B and Avenue C here.

Tonight: A Chino Garcia Oral History and screening of "CHARAS is Alive on Spaceship Earth" as part of Lower East Side History Month (Loisaida Center)

Q&A with Jeremiah Moss titled "The Aesthetics of Gentrification, and New York’s Top-Down Approach to Change" (Hyperallergic)

More about Slurp Shop opening on First Avenue (Eater ... previously)

Solid reviews for Sara Driver's documentary "Boom for Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat," opening today at the IFC Center (Official site... Rotten Tomatoes)

"In My Room" is an exhibit featuring the work of photographer Saul Leiter, who lived and worked in the East Village — now showing at the Howard Greenberg Gallery (The Eye of Photography)

Mother's Day at the Metrograph includes screenings of "Mermaids" and "Mildred Pierce" (Official site)

More on the Ramones book by Danny Fields (The Village Voice)

And happening tomorrow at First Street Green Art Park...

MAY 12, 2018 Join us for a full day of events including community workshops, murals, music, and art.  33 East 1st Street, at Houston St & 2nd Ave. 1:00 – 4:00 pm: Community Mural School, Learn about the environment by making collaborative art with painters Alex Evans & Anna Souvorov. @alex_andrae @asouvs 1:00 – 4:00 pm: SVA flower & plant collage workshop by Suzanne Anker, Chair of School of Visual Art’s BFA Fine Arts Department. Ms. Anker weaves traditional and experimental media in SVA's Bio Art Lab. @svanyc @svabioart 5:00 - 7:00 pm: Opening Reception for “Neighbors” by John Raymond Mireles, Restoring America’s shattered national unity one photograph at a time, Mr. Mireles exhibits portraits of Americans from all 50 States from his “Neighbors” Project on the perimeter fence from May 1-July 4, 2018. @johnmireles 7:00 - 9:00 pm: Benefit reception co-hosted by Turn Gallery, 37 E First Street (suggested donation $25). All day - Live painting by "Wasteland" Open Call muralists and Centrefuge. @centrefugepublicartproject New Media artists Carlos Rosas and Leanna Rosas debut "MAMA II: Above Board” – a Media Art Mobile Attack unit on wheels with FSG's greatest hits projected on the sail. Music by DJ Jake Lama www.jakelama.com @jakelama #murals #photographynyc #muralart #muralsnyc #streetart #publicart #blockparty #park #artpark #nycpark #nycart #nycartist #local #localartist #supportlocal #supportart #community #neighbors #nonprofitart #streetphotography #streetstyle #urban #urbanphotography #lowereastside #schoolofvisualarts #communitymural

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I Am a Rent-Stabilized Tenant



East Village resident Susan Schiffman has been photographing the apartments of rent-stabilized tenants living in the East Village for her Instagram account, I Am a Rent Stabilized Tenant. She will share some of the photos here for this ongoing EVG feature.

Photos and text by Susan Schiffman

Tenants: Jess and Martin, since 1981

Why did you move to the East Village?

Jess:

I was living in Brooklyn and I wanted to live in Manhattan. I answered an ad in the newspaper and I came and looked at [the apartment]. It needed work, but it had a garden. So I took it. I really didn’t know the East Village. I was by myself at the time. I was baffled because all night long people would be ringing my bell. I didn’t know very many people. They weren’t ringing for me. It didn’t take me too long to understand that the first door as you come in which is one room right on the street had a metal door. There was a hole in the door and they were selling drugs through the door.

There was also a shooting gallery across the street in an abandoned building. People were selling drugs on the corners. I became aware of all this. At the same time many storefronts were turning into performance spaces. I started working with an experimental theater company in a squat on 13th Street. We were working with new kinds of texts and new forms.

Many people today feel nostalgic for that time. There was a lot of misery and poverty. But then there was the beginning of a renewal and renaissance.

I found out that my mother had been born in this neighborhood, on Sixth Street between Avenue C and Avenue D, in 1921. I hadn’t known that. I feel a connection to her. Her family moved to Brooklyn eventually. In that typical immigrant thing, when once you get a little money you try to move out to a better place.

It always gave me pleasure to think, when our son was born, that he played in the Park that my mother had played in. When our son was born, it was before they had renovated the playground. It had one broken swing and a sandbox. We saw the whole change.





Martin:

I had many times ventured from the west side across Bleecker Street and St Mark's but never proceeded any further east. I just noticed a different vibe right at the entrance to St Mark's. There was less-intense light — it was the dark part of town then — and it seemed unfamiliar and mysterious. Soon enough I entered the gate to meet friends I had met by then. Then I rented an apartment on Avenue B.

What do you love about your apartment?

Jess:

I love the serenity here. It is really quite peaceful. If I want company, I walk outside the door. There’s still shops where I know the people. I can go to the butcher. I can go to Ben’s magazine store. A lot of places have disappeared and people we knew. I work in the neighborhood. I teach in a school in the neighborhood. I walk everywhere.

There are also things that we don’t like. There are chronic problems in the apartment. They can’t really be solved definitively. We have leaks in the bathroom. It’s an old building. We have lived here for 37 years. We have 37 years worth of stuff.

Let me show you our garden.









Martin:

Stabilized rent. The door to the backyard. Being woken by the song of birds. And listening to the various voices of human beings living their lives freely and not being concerned with disturbing their neighbors. To move out of the apartment onto the street any time of the day and night and encounter people.

I don’t like that It’s small and that it is on the ground floor and therefore not much light enters. I love apartments with high ceilings and even though I like this apartment, I still have to admit that I don’t like that our apartment does not have high ceilings.

What I like about the neighborhood is the human scale.

I don’t like the pretentious restaurants that lack atmosphere and culinary delights, the chain stores and the absence of craftspeople as there once were when I moved in, visible from the streets and avenues at work. I don’t like the nail salons.







If you're interested in inviting Susan in to photograph your apartment for an upcoming post, then you may contact her via this email.

Tinkersphere leaves 5th Street for the Lower East Side



Bareburger wasn't the only business to leave the East Village for the Lower East Side this month.

At the beginning of May, Tinkersphere, the retailer specializing in robotics, DIY electronics and toys, left Fifth Street for a much-larger space at 152 Allen St. between Stanton and Rivington ...



Tinkersphere opened in July 2013 in the shop between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

The former East Village Cheese space has a new tenant on 7th Street



The for lease sign has been removed from the former East Village Cheese space on Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue... we're told that a clothing boutique will be opening in this storefront, per a source on the block. Not sure at the moment what type of clothing store — say, a designer boutique or some kind of vintage clothier. Or both!

The cheesemonger closed in early December after two-plus years at this address. More background on the Cheese drama here.

H/T Steven!

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Reel classics: '2001' arrives at City Cinemas Village East


[Photo from April 26 by @BethPapaleo]

Stanley Kubrick's Academy Award-winning "2001: A Space Odyssey" returns to theaters for its 50th anniversary ... it plays on 70mm at the City Cinemas Village East starting on May 18.

Dave on 7th notes that the reels arrived today at the theater on Second Avenue and 12th Street...





The film will be playing in the Jaffe Art Theater. Advance tickets are on sale here.

Q&A with the authors of the 'Rock & Roll Explorer Guide to New York City'



Longtime friends Mike Katz and Crispin Kott, both obsessive music fans and history buffs (and at least one is a self-described failed drummer), channeled their love of rock & roll and NYC into a new book titled "Rock and Roll Explorer Guide to New York City."

The book, via publisher Globe Pequot, provides a five-borough look "at how bands came together, scenes developed and classic songs were written."

I asked Katz and Kott a few questions via email about the book and what readers can expect...

How did the idea for this book come about?

Katz: We’ve known each other for 25 years and share a deep fascination not only with music, but with its history. We also share an appreciation for the cultural uniqueness of New York and all the incredible artists who have lived and worked here over time. Beyond that we’ve spent years walking the streets and learning the terrain of this town.

We were kicking around a few nebulous ideas for trying to tell the story of New York Rock & Roll when we attended a reunion of the Velvet Underground at the New York Public Library in December 2009.

Lou Reed and his bandmates all talked about their various adventures throughout the city, and it hit us that this might be a way in. Examine history geographically, street by street and neighborhood by neighborhood, like a travel guide. It took us a while longer to settle on a specific format, and how best to organize the narratives of several key artists, but we believe we’ve come up with something that’s informational yet fun to read.

How did you decide what NOT to include? There isn’t any shortage of NYC music history and trivia. (For example: The site of GG Allin’s last show is now a Duane Reade on Avenue B.)

Kott: We actually had that GG Allin death site on Avenue B in an early draft of the manuscript but we ultimately felt it was too grim to include. Not that there isn’t plenty of grimness in the book.

Early on we decided that with the exception of places that were both well known and historically significant, we didn’t want to include anyone’s current home address. We expanded that to include former residences that were still the homes of family members. That came up quite a few times, actually. But we didn’t want anyone bothering musicians or their families at home, so we left those out.

And we shared with our editors and publisher a goal of not putting out a book that was cumbersome or unwieldy, so that sometimes meant weighing the cultural significance of one location against another to see which to keep and which to cut. We also knew that by doing this we risked people just like us saying we’d made the wrong choices sometimes, but if we kept everything in there you’d have to carry the book around in a wheelbarrow.

Katz: From the outset we knew we wanted to create something portable and affordable that people could carry in their backpacks and read on the subway. We weren’t interested in producing something heavy and encyclopedic that sat on a shelf. It had to be interactive and encourage readers to get out and explore; to go where their heroes had gone. That dictated policing our own obsessive tendencies.

Every era and every artist presents its own set of rabbit holes to get lost in. We had to make sure we had enough primary information to satisfy the casual fan, and yet provide a quality selection of deeper details for the superfans. Some artists demand it, like Dylan or the Velvet Underground, certainly.

Covering all the pertinent eras, and there were more than we bargained for, was another challenge. So much of the music that laid the groundwork for the rock era was made in New York, too, and we felt we had to provide that context. New York has long been a major hub of the music industry, but we chose to focus primarily on the performers. We do tell the stories of certain key entrepreneurs, songwriters, and producers, though, too.

We had to make plenty of hard choices, and frequently called and messaged each other at all hours to work through many conundrums. We joke that all the stuff we didn’t use will go in the deluxe slipcased edition!

The East Village receives ample coverage in the book. Obviously there’s CBGB and the Fillmore East. What are a few of the under-the-radar places (or historical tidbits — like Nico lived at 101 Avenue A!) that people may not be aware of?

Kott: My favorite find in the East Village was the location of the former Kiwi Club, which was a regular hangout of a lot of the people associated with the early CBGB scene. And the Dead Boys lived in squalor above the place, too. I spoke to Legs McNeil and James Marshall, and both gave me great detail about what the place was like, but it took more digging to track down the actual address. It’s possible longtime East Village residents remember the place, but I was a kid when all that was happening so I’d have never known.

Katz: One of the things that people may not be aware of is how many identities some of these venues had. The Fillmore East, for example, aside from its roots as a Yiddish theater, has been known in the rock era as the Village Theater, the Villageast, and The Saint, in addition to the Fillmore.

You’re both music fans. What was your favorite discovery about the NYC music scene while researching the book?

Katz: Staying in the East Village, I really enjoyed researching the Fugs, and how central they were to developing the unique countercultural atmosphere of the area. They were serious troublemakers dedicated to pushing the buttons of a conservative society, but in the form of a band. And they faced real peril. They were repeatedly harassed, arrested, and threatened by the authorities, as well as terrorists. People are often unaware of how dangerous the ’60s could be.

Kott: I don’t know that it’s a discovery as much as a confirmation of what I already suspected, but the more layers we peeled back, the more we found a city that was a lot more connected than people give it credit for. I don’t know if there’s anywhere else in the world where so many different genres could come together and intermingle the way they have in New York City.

When you say “punk” to someone, they might have a narrow idea of what that means. But look at those first wave groups that came out of CBGB: Talking Heads, Blondie, Television, Ramones, Suicide, Mink DeVille — the list goes on and on, and none of them sounded the same. They all came from different places and had different influences, and most of them were open to not only hearing what was going on beyond the Bowery, but also bringing different elements of that into their music.

How do you think this current time period in NYC music might be remembered years from now for a future Explorer Guide?

Kott: I hope it carries on and we get to revise the book every so often forever to include artists that won’t make their mark for another five or 10 years. With Lizzy Goodman’s excellent "Meet Me in the Bathroom," people can experience an early aughts scene that grew around bands like the Strokes and Yeah Yeah Yeahs and wonder if something like that could ever happen again in this city. Whether there’s another total cultural shift through rock & roll that comes out of New York City, I don’t know. But there will always be new exciting artists here. The new Parquet Courts record is out in a couple of weeks, and I can’t wait.

Katz: One of the underlying subtexts of our book is the perpetual struggle to find places for music to be heard and for musicians to live. New York gets more expensive and less accessible for young artists every day, yet somehow it soldiers on. There are a plethora of great music venues throughout the five boroughs that cater to virtually every musical genre. Some will close and others will take their place.

While it’s easy to be cynical and grim I remain hopeful that New York will remain central to contemporary music in our country. It has to be, our population is too interesting and diverse to accept anything less.

---

The publication date is June 1, but the book is already available in some shops, such as the Strand (see below) and online. The official launch takes place June 3 out at Rough Trade in Williamsburg. Follow @rrexplorernyc for updates as well as some archival rock pics from NYC.


[Photo from the Strand on Tuesday]

At Dual Specialty Store


Dual Specialty Store is the subject of East Village-based photographer Gudren Georges' latest photo essay.

Gudren shared some of her images with me from the 30-year-old shop at 91 First Ave. between Fifth Street and Sixth Street.

As Gudren writes about the family-run business from proprietor Abdul Patwary, a native of Bangladesh:

One can find anything food and health related here: from spices to herbal teas to henna, perfume oil and toothpaste; fresh southeast Asian ingredients such as turmeric and green chiles; beer from all over the world too... Expert advise is available for free.



In 2005, a fire wiped out the shop. Patwary, with the help of his family and the local community, was able to keep the business alive. Here's Patwary talking about it in a 2012 interview with The Local:

It was a very bad year, but we rebuilt. The damage was bad so we had to throw away all our products. I had insurance. All my family helped out after the fire so we were able to survive. It was my brother, all my sons, my nephew, my daughter, my wife, my father. Everyone came to help and work here. The community helped too. People showed us how much they appreciated our work by helping. There was a lady next door who helped us set up a tent outside with spices and herbs while we rebuilt.

Gudren reports that the store is going strong — so much so that Patwary is in the process of opening a second location in Williamsburg.

Find more photos here.

Previously on EV Grieve:
A spin through Downtown Yarns on Avenue A

Favorite East Village places: Ink on A

Bareburger making its Orchard Street debut

Bareburger will be in soft-open mode today ahead of its grand opening tomorrow at its new LES home — 173 Orchard St. just north of Stanton Street.

Matt Kouskalis, who owns and operates a handful of the city's Bareburger outposts, said that they'd be starting delivery service tomorrow as well.

The regional all–organic burger chain left its six-year-old home at 85 Second Ave. at the end of April.

Kouskalis told me back in February that escalating rents at the East Village location prompted the move to the Lower East Side.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Bareburger is leaving 2nd Avenue; new outpost slated for Orchard Street

Moving day for Bareburger

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

CB2 denies zoning amendment for proposed hotel next to the Merchant's House

News via Instagram tonight from the Community Board 2 meeting ... where the Board denied the necessary zoning text amendments that the developers of a proposed 8-story hotel needed to build next door to the landmarked Merchant's House Museum on Fourth Street. (Find more background here.) Next stop on the review tour: The Manhattan Borough President's office ... and eventually before City Council, who has the final say.

EVG Etc.: Praise for Soogil on 4th Street; tattoos on B for the OG Avengers


[Outside Village Farm on 2nd Avenue and 9th Street via Steven]

Judge dismisses defamation lawsuit by Ludlow Street bar No Fun against LES Dwellers (The Lo-Down)

Tonight: CB2 hearing proposal for zoning changes for new hotel adjacent to the Merchant’s House (BB ... previously)

A Lower East Side History Month look at Fourth Street and Fifth Street (Off the Grid)

Pete Wells impressed by the cooking at Soogil on Fourth Street (The New York Times ... previously)

"Boom for Real" series continue tonight with "Permanent Vacation" and "She's Gotta Have It" (Film Anthology Archives)

Joshua Lord of East Side Ink Tattoo on Avenue B created matching tattoos for the cast of "Avengers: Infinity War" (EW)

Prune's Gabrielle Hamilton named outstanding chef in the 2018 James Beard Award (Eater)

... and EVG reader Shiv shares this photo... signage for Galaxy Beauty arrived over the weekend at 244 E. 14th St. between Second Avenue and Third Avenue... the beauty business is taking part of the Synergy space (and will you have to enter through the gym?)

2 years later, 136 2nd Ave. ready for its restaurant



On May 6, 2016, we noted that workers had erected the plywood around the vacant storefront at 136 Second Ave. between St. Mark's Place and East Ninth Street.

Two years of gut renovating later, and the owners here are ready to appear before the CB3-SLA committee for a new liquor license for the address.

According to the questionnaire posted to the CB3 website (PDF here), the unnamed full-service restaurant will serve American and French food nearly all day — the kitchen hours are listed as 8 a.m. to 4 a.m.

The sample menu shows a variety of pretty standard options for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Here's part of the dinner menu...



The applicants, listed as Greg Lebedowicz and Jerry Lebedowicz, are also seeking outdoor dining via a sidewalk cafe and rear garden. In total, the questionnaire lists an occupancy of 74 people with 24 tables — 15 inside and nine outdoors. There are also three bars with 38 stools in the two-level space.

The applicants were previously licensed for Nitedreams LLC on Banker Street in Greenpoint from 2003 to 2008, per the paperwork at the CB3 website.

The CB3-SLA meeting is next Monday at 6:30 p.m. The location: the Public Hotel, 17th Floor, Sophia Room, 215 Chrystie St. between Houston and Stanton.

Bar 82, which closed at the end of March 2013, was the last retail tenant at 136 Second Ave.

Cafe Zaiya has closed on Cooper Square



The DOH closed Cafe Zaiya at 69 Cooper Square following an inspection on April 30.

The Japanese bakery-cafe that opened here in 2008 between St. Mark's Place and Seventh Street has remained closed since the DOH visit. And it appears that the cafe won't be returning. Workers cleaned out the space yesterday, and the location is no longer listed on the Cafe Zaiya website. (The other two locations are in Midtown.)

As for the DOH, the inspection turned up 73 violation points, including for "Insufficient or no refrigerated or hot holding equipment to keep potentially hazardous foods at required temperatures" and "Food not protected from potential source of contamination during storage, preparation, transportation, display or service."

This location had passed all previous inspections, with only four violation points in 2017.

That's all for the Loop on 3rd Avenue



And just a little north of the usual coverage area... a for rent sign now hangs above the Loop, the small sushi restaurant on Third Avenue near 16th Street.

They named their signature rolls after Billy Joel, John Lennon, the Spice Girls and other pop cultural references. As The Infatuation noted a few years back: "We’d love to hate it, but it’s all pretty damn good."

And food writer Nick Solares, who shared the above photo, noted: "It was not destination sushi but a solid neighborhood option."

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Tuesday's parting shot



The new puppy here in Tompkins Square Park is named, topically enough, Stormy El Chapo Daniels. (He responds to Stormy.)

Photo today by Derek Berg...

Another chance to hear about the L-train shutdown



The MTA and the New York City Department of Transportation (NYCDOT) are hosting two more town halls this month to discuss the upcoming L-train shutdown.

Here's the deal via 6sqft:

NYC Transit President Andy Byford, NYCDOT Commissioner Polly Trottenberg and other agency representatives will explain alternate transit options, address questions and reveal how the agency plans to help get the 225,000 daily weekday customers – 50,000 in Manhattan alone – to their destinations during the service interruption that will cut all L train service between Bedford Avenue in Williamsburg and Eighth Avenue in Manhattan for 15 months beginning in April of 2019.

NYCDOT will discuss proposed changes like HOV restrictions on the Williamsburg Bridge, the addition of Select Bus Service to 14th Street, and additional protected bike lanes and bus lanes to offset the inconvenience of the missing subway.

The Manhattan meeting is tomorrow night from 6:30-8:30 (doors open at 5:30) at The Auditorium (at The New School) at 66 W. 12th St. between Fifth Avenue and Sixth Avenue.

Preservationists: City schedules next public hearing on tech hub without any public notice


[Tech hub endering via RAL Development]

The proposed tech hub at the site of the now-former PC Richard complex on 14th Street at Irving Place is making its way through the city’s Uniform Land Use Review Procedure. Back on Friday, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer's office released her recommendation (see more on that below).

The application now moves to the City Planning Commission before a deciding vote by City Council later this year.

As previously reported, the 21-story building would house a digital skills training center, flex-office space for startups, market-rate office space and a food hall, among other things.

To make this happen, the site/area needs to be upzoned. This zoning change is of particular concern to some area residents and preservationists, who have stressed that the fabric of the neighborhood could be lost with a large number of out-of-context new developments south of Union Square along Broadway, University Place and Fourth Avenue.

The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP) has been leading the efforts behind a rezoning of the area to enforce some height restrictions and affordable housing requirements.

Now GVSHP officials have just learned that the city scheduled the next public hearing for tomorrow afternoon — without any actual public notice.

Here's an email via the GVSHP:

Last Friday, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer released her recommendation on the proposed 14th Street Tech Hub, as part of the required public approval process. Brewer initially pledged not to include the need for neighborhood protections to accompany Tech Hub as part of her recommendation, as GVSHP and many others have called for, calling them “unrelated.”

However, GVSHP worked hard to persuade the Borough President that the Tech Hub without neighborhood protections would accelerate rampant overdevelopment in the University Place, Broadway, and 3rd and 4th Avenue corridors, as did thousands of neighborhood residents who wrote or called her. Following this, Brewer issued her recommendation (read the PDF here) including mention of the potential impacts upon the adjacent Greenwich Village and East Village neighborhoods and the need for neighborhood protections, as GVSHP has proposed and called for.

Outrageously, directly following this, the City scheduled the sole City Planning Commission public hearing on this matter for this Wednesday, May 9 with virtually no public notification (as of this morning, the city’s own Land Use Tracking System had still not shown that the City Planning Commission hearing had even been scheduled). Adding insult to injury, this item is scheduled as the LAST item on a long agenda for the day, making it virtually impossible to say how late in the day this item will be heard.

DON'T LET THE MAYOR CUT YOU OUT OF THE PROCESS FOR DETERMINING THE FATE OF YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD!

You can read more here.

In late February, CB3 approved a land use application to create the tech hub. In doing so, CB3 also included an amendment in their resolution calling for zoning protection.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Behold Civic Hall, the high-tech future of Union Square — and NYC

Speaking out against a 'Silicon Alley' in this neighborhood

P.C. Richard puts up the moving signs on 14th Street; more Tech Hub debate to come

Report: CB3 OKs proposal for Union Square tech hub; calls for zoning protections

About the bar-restaurant proposed for 2 St. Mark's Place



Looks like Bull McCabe's may have some bar company on St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue. (RIP Grassroots.)

Applicants are on this month's CB3-SLA committee docket for a new liquor license for 2 St. Mark's Place at Third Avenue/Cooper Square.

The questionnaire on file at the CB3 website (PDF here) shows that the applicants are involved with Draught 55 Bar & Kitchen on East 55th Street, a six-year-old establishment offering more than 40 craft beers.

The applicants describe the menu for the new space as a "spin on classic pub food with contemporary American offerings." The proposed hours are 10 a.m. to 2 a.m. Sunday-Wednesday; until 4 a.m. Thursday-Saturday. The seating chart shows 19 tables for 65 guests (that includes a bar with 10 stools).

No word yet on the name of the bar-restaurant for 2 St. Mark's Place.

The CB3-SLA meeting is next Monday at 6:30 p.m. The location: the Public Hotel, 17th Floor, Sophia Room, 215 Chrystie St. between Houston and Stanton.

2 St. Mark's Place was most recently Ayios Greek Rotisserie, which closed at the end of 2017 after 16 months in business. Previously, the address was the St. Mark's Ale House, which had a 21-year run until July 2016. (And once upon a time it was the second location of the Five Spot Cafe.)