Monday, February 4, 2019

Developers of 3 St. Mark's Place are looking to increase the size of their proposed office building at 3rd Avenue to 10 floors with air-rights deal


[Photo from Saturday]

Updated 2/14: The CB3 committee reportedly voted down the air-rights transfer.

This past October, Real Estate Equities Corporation (REEC) filed new permits for 3 St. Mark's Place (the address of the former Papaya King) for a 5-story, 29,030-square-foot building with ground-floor retail.

These plans were actually smaller than the original specs reported for this northeast corner of Third Avenue and St. Mark's Place. According to The Real Deal in November 2017, a seven-story office building was slated for this soon-to-be-demolished assemblage of buildings.

In any event, hold everything on those 5-floor plans.

On Feb. 13, reps for the developer will appear before CB3's Landmarks Committee to discuss transferring the air rights from the landmarked — and under-renovation — Hamilton-Holly House across the street at 4 St. Mark's Place.

With these air rights and approved zoning variance, the Morris Adjimi-designed building at 3 St. Mark's Place would rise to 10 stories. Here's a look at the rendering posted to the CB3 site...



This link will take you to the PDF on the CB3 website with details on the proposal.

Here's part of the pitch, per their overview:

The Applicant is requesting the Landmarks Preservation Commission (the "LPC") to issue a report to the City Planning Commission pursuant to Section 74-79 of the New York City Zoning Resolution to facilitate the construction of a ten-story building (the "Proposed Development"! located at 3 St. Mark's Place ...

The special permit would (a) allow a transfer of 8,386 square feet of development rights from the zoning lot located at 4 St. Mark's Place (which is occupied by the Hamilton-Holly House (the "Landmark"), an individual landmark, and (b) modify the provisions of ZR Section 33-432 to allow the Proposed Development to penetrate the maximum front wall height and sky exposure plane within the 20-foot initial setback distance on St. Mark's Place. This waiver allows for a better relationship to the adjacent buildings on St. Marks Place and allows for better office floorplates.

As a condition of the special permit, the owner of the Landmarks Building has agreed to undertake additional work — more expansive in scope than the originally approved work — to restore the Landmark Building to a sound, first-class condition, and to thereafter implement a cyclical maintenance plan for the Building.

These commitments will be set forth in a restrictive declaration, binding upon the owner and its successor and assigns in perpetuity, implementing the approved continuing maintenance program.

[Photo of 4 St. Mark's Place from last month]

The Feb. 13 meeting is the beginning of the review process, which requires an application to the LPC followed by an application to the City Planning Commission for the special permit.

Back to the overview for the plan for more zoning jargon...

In its report, LPC will comment on the restoration work and continuing maintenance plan as well as the manner in which the requested waiver of the otherwise applicable height and setback regulations contributes to a harmonious relationship between the Landmark and the Proposed Development. LPC is not reviewing the actual work on the Landmark because this work has been previously reviewed and approved.

After the special permit application is filed with CPC and certified pursuant to ULURP, the request for 74-79 Special Permit will be referred back to the Community Board for the second step in the review.

So this marks just the beginning of the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP). Read this primer on an explanation of the process.

The CB3 Landmarks Committee meeting on Feb. 13 is open to the public (and is open to public comment). The meeting is at the JASA Green Residence, 200 E. Fifth St. at the Bowery. And this certainly isn't the last we'll hear on this variance request.

REEC picked up the 99-year leasehold for the properties — 1 St. Mark's Place, 3 St. Mark’s Place, 23 and 25-27 Third Ave. — for nearly $150 million, per The Real Deal in November 2017.

The Continental was the last business on the corner, with the last call happening on New Year's Eve.

The corner assemblage is owned by the Gabay family.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Exclusive: After 40 years, punk rock mainstay Trash and Vaudeville is leaving St. Mark's Place

4 St. Mark's Place is for sale

More residential units and a 5th-floor addition in the works for landmarked 4 St. Mark's Place

You'll be back: Look at the renovated Hamilton-Holly House on St. Mark's Place

The Shake Shack effect? McDonald's on 3rd Avenue at St. Mark's Place has closed after 20 years

Report: NE corner of St. Mark's Place and 3rd Avenue will yield to a 7-story office building

Demolition permits filed for northeast corner of 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place

End is nearing for the businesses on the northeast corner of 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place

The Continental gets a 3-month reprieve

New building plans revealed for 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place

Brodo debuts on Astor Place this week



The Brodo bone-broth kiosk will have a soft opening today on Astor Place near the uptown 6 stop ... Owner Marco Canora told me they'd be open then "in earnest" tomorrow.

Canora debuted a Brodo to-go window on the First Avenue side of Hearth back in 2014the start of what became a nationwide bone-broth trend. The Astor Place kiosk makes the fifth Brodo outpost in the city.

Brodo temporarily takes the place of La Newyorkina for the early part of 2019. La Newyorkina, which sells Mexican palettas and ices, is expected to return this summer.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Brodo opening a bone-broth outpost on Astor Place

16 Handles is back in FroYo action



The 16 Handles outpost on Second Avenue between Ninth Street and 10th Street reopened Saturday after a two-month winter hiatus.

EVG 16 Handles Correspondent Steven passed along these photos, one of which shows the shop's new hours...



16 Handles opened on Second Avenue in 2008 (their FroYo empire has grown to include locations in Connecticut, Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts and New Jersey), and has outlasted every other FroYo purveyor around. RIP, for instance, Yogurt Station ... Red Mango ... Funkiberry ... Very Berry... PinkBerry ... and any other forgotten Berries.

Bad news at Spinner's?



Spinner's short tenure at 536 E. 14th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B has apparently come to an end. The quick-serve restaurant has not been open lately, and newspaper now covers the front door and window. Google lists Spinner's as permanently closed.

Spinner's, billed as a chicken boutique, opened this past Aug. 23. Two months in, they closed for a quickie revamp, and added pizza to their arsenal.

EVG commenter MrNiceGuy had this to say on our October post:

I'm rooting for this place, but it seems like they've got an uphill battle — the foot traffic on that part of 14th St isn't great, and L-train construction is non-stop across the street. But I've met the owner, he's a really nice guy and his chicken is great. If you live in the neighborhood, give them a shot! Adding pizza to the menu seems like a last-minute Hail Mary. Good luck Spinner's!

Previously on EV Grieve:
Spinner's bringing chicken and Texas BBQ to 14th Street

Sunday, February 3, 2019

SUPER BOWL SUNDAY III



Photo on 10th Street tonight by EVG regular Daniel...

SUPER BOWL SUNDAY II



The pre-Super Bowl delivery situation outside Atomic Wings on First Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street ... thanks to EVG reader Laura for the photo!

SUPER BOWL SUNDAY



Photo this afternoon on Second Avenue between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place by Derek Berg...

Week in Grieview


[Wednesday's squall from 2nd Avenue and St. Mark's Place]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

RIP Brian Butterick/Hattie Hathaway (Friday)

St. Mark's is deader: St. Mark's Comics is closing after 36 years (Tuesday)

Longtime East Village residents open Foxface, now serving sandwiches at Theater 80 (Thursday)

Looks like there's a Trader Joe's coming to 432-438 E. 14th St. after all (Friday) ... Trader Joe's will end home delivery in Manhattan on March 1 (Wednesday)

A waste of space: 10th Street still waiting for the garbage trucks to move on (Thursday)

Happy No. 20 to Lavagna! (Friday)

Commodities is under new ownership on 1st Avenue (Tuesday)

Ravi DeRossi plans vegan diner in former Bar Virage space (Monday)

Plywood arrives on 7th Street and 2nd Avenue; excavation expected in 2 weeks (Wednesday)

Concern again for Punjabi Grocery & Deli on 1st Street (Tuesday)

Headed south: Mr. White has apparently closed on St. Mark's Place (Monday)

La Plaza's temporary closure for new fencing postponed; farewell to the Winter Flowers (Monday)

Momentary afternoon whiteout in Tompkins Square Park (Wednesday)

Eating in the East Village via Eater (Thursday)

Mi Casa Latina debuts on 14th Street (Monday)

Spicy Moon brings vegetarian szechuan to 6th Street (Monday)

Wara looks to open in early February on 1st Avenue (Tuesday)

Former Kingsley space now for rent (Monday)

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Reactions to St. Mark's Comics closing


[Photo by Steven]

As first noted on Tuesday, St. Mark's Comics announced that it will close at the end of February after 36 years on St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue.

"I have been working 90 hours a week for 36 years, and I no longer have the wherewithal to fight them — all of these various reasons," owner Mitch Cutler told me about all the different factors that led to his decision to close up shop. "It is challenging to have a storefront business in New York City for a number of reasons...it is challenging to keep and maintain a retail storefront and there are enough impediments now that—like I said, I'm exhausted and can't fight them anymore."

News of the closing was picked up by a variety of news sources (and thanks to Curbed and Gothamist for linking to my post!) ... there was a lot of reaction via Twitter. Here's a sampling...









And there was this from storyboard artist Sean Chen...


Meanwhile, the store is having a clearance sale, as you can see on the sign outside...


[Photo by Steven]

Grant Shaffer's NY See



Here's this week's NY See, East Village-based illustrator Grant Shaffer's comic series — an observational sketch diary of things that he sees and hears around the neighborhood ... and NYC.

Saturday, February 2, 2019

Saturday's parting shot



The sunset view downtown at 5:35 p.m. via Bobby Williams...

Today in discarded Russian VHS tapes on 2nd Avenue



Derek Berg spotted these on Second Avenue near Fifth Street ... perhaps a marketing tie-in to the new Netflix series "Russian Doll"? (No, but...)

EVG Etc.: African-American history in the East Village; an EV avenue on the Upper East Side


[Doggy bag on 7th Street earlier this week via Derek Berg]

Good Samaritan assaulted at the McDonald's on 14th Street near First Avenue (Town & Village)

Co-working network The Wing is moving its corporate headquarters to the former Stuyvesant Polyclinic building on Second Avenue between St. Mark's and Ninth Street (6sqft ... previously)

A guided tour of African-American history in the East Village (Off the Grid)

Our local City Council rep, Carlina Rivera, discusses the opposition to the new stormproofing plans for East River Park (WNYC ... previously)

Details on the NYCHA, HUD tentative deal (Curbed)

Get the lead out! Tests show lead levels 36x health standard in this Delshah Capital building on Ludlow Street (The Real Deal)

Avenue A — on the Upper East Side? (Ephemeral New York)

The Metrograph is screening Chantal Akerman's mesmerizing documentary "News From Home," featuring long takes of locations in New York City circa the mid-1970s (Official site)

An interview with writer Laurie Gwen Shapiro, a lifelong Lower East Side resident (Untapped Cities)

Another Ramone book to consider — Richie Ramone's "I Know Better Now" (LA Weekly)

15 things (maybe) you didn’t know about the East Village (6sqft ... previously)

The Posties declare winners and losers in the L-train shutdown switcheroo (The Post)

CB2 says no to Elizabeth Street Garden redevelopment (Curbed)

Is the Reported app is curbing bad taxi driving? (Streetsblog)

A look at the residents of Westbeth Artists Housing, the first and largest federally subsidized artists’ colony in the country when it opened in 1970 (Artsy)

... and here's Eden with this crime report (at Tarallucci e Vino?) ...

Noted



One of the homemade street signs spotted along Avenue A. (There's one for No Parking on Avenue A at St. Mark's Place.) Be mindful of the cardboard tickets the city will issue.

Friday, February 1, 2019

Friday's parting shot



Feb. 1 spring fever in Tompkins Square Park... photo today by Bobby Williams...

'Drink' up



London's Snapped Ankles release their second full-length record on March 1. Ahead of that, here's the video for the single "Drink and Glide."

RIP Brian Butterick/Hattie Hathaway


[Photo of Brian Butterick from 2009 by Stacie Joy]

Downtown nightlife legend Brian Butterick, who performed in drag as Hattie Hathaway, died on Wednesday. He was 62. According to a statement from Howl! Arts, Inc., where he served as a board member, Butterick had lung cancer.

Per Howl!:

His warmth, intelligence, wit and friendship, have sustained all of us throughout his many years as a fierce creative force in the community. Provocateur, satirist, and magnet for bringing together diverse individuals into his visionary process, he was an inspiration and a driving force in the Downtown arts world and in all our hearts. We will miss him.

Artforum had more on Butterick, who was born in the Bronx in 1956:

In addition to shaping the East Village’s queer nightlife as a producer and performer at venues such as the Mudd Club and Mother, Butterick was an early collaborator with and lover of artist David Wojnarowicz. He was also a member of Wojnarowicz’s New Wave band, 3 Teens Kill 4 (Butterick played the drum machine). In the late 1970s, Butterick posed for several of the artist’s iconic “Arthur Rimbaud in New York” photographs.

Around that same time, Butterick got a job doing security at the influential queer cabaret and nightclub Pyramid, eventually becoming its creative director. He also coauthored a history of the club titled "Secrets of the Great Pyramid: The Pyramid Cocktail Lounge as Cultural Laboratory" in 2015. It was there, in the early 1990s, that Butterick developed his Hattie Hathaway alter ego, named for his grandmother and Nancy Kulp’s Miss Jane Hathaway character on the CBS sitcom, "The Beverly Hillbillies."


[Photo of Hattie Hathaway from 2011 by Stacie Joy]

In this August 2016 interview with Michael Musto at Paper, Butterick recalled his first nightlife job:

I like to think it was late-night short order cook at the Empire Diner, which was in 1979. Then I was a busboy at Danceteria [a rock dance club at 37th Street], which was really, really long shifts from eight or nine until eight or nine in the morning. They had no liquor license and they advertised in the New York Times! Whatever you can do illegal, they did it. They were all such mobsters. They thought they could get away with it. We all went to jail. By the time they moved it to 21st Street, it was a different branch of the family. Meanwhile, the Mudd Club [a new wavey hangout in Tribeca] was open and Richard Boch was working at the door. After Danceteria closed, I worked at an after hours club called Berlin, which opened at three in the morning. Iolo Carew worked at Berlin and got me the job at Mudd, from 1980-'81.

In a Facebook post, Lady Bunny discussed Butterick's influence during his time at the Pyramid on Avenue A...



A memorial for Butterick is the works; details will be announced in the coming weeks. Meanwhile, people may leave tributes on his website.


[Image via Howl!]

Looks like there's a Trader Joe's coming to 432-438 E. 14th St. after all



Last October, I asked a Trader Joe's media rep at the national office if they were opening a store at 432-438 E. 14th St. at Avenue A. The response: "Unfortunately, we do not have any current plans for a store at that location."

Perhaps those current plans weren't for October ... but it sure looks there are plans now here in mid-winter.

Yesterday morning, EVG reader Laura H. spotted this truck dropping off various equipment outside the new 8-story luxury rental called EVE... the work was happening in the under-construction retail space on the 14th Street side of the building...



... and there is a sign on the supplies...



... wait for it...



Some history. In May 2017, The Real Deal, citing anonymous sources, reported that Trader Joe's "quietly signed a lease about two months ago with Mack Real Estate and Benenson Capital Partners ... for 8,531 square on the ground floor and 14,170 square feet on the lower level."

However, there wasn't much else mentioned about this possible new TJ's location (aside from some TJ clerk gossip that it wasn't happening) in the ensuing months. Finally, in a preview of EVE last August, City Realty noted: "To the delight of residents and neighbors, Trader Joe’s is the building’s retail tenant."

Still, a few months later, Trader Joe's said there weren't plans for this location.

A map on the EVE website shows a Trader Joe's here...



It's also now mentioned in the "East Village Life" section that lists nearby restaurants and stores. Per the EVE site: "Although with a Trader Joe’s in the building, you may not need to go too far."

Trader Joe's is reportedly tight-lipped about its operations ... which apparently includes information about new locations, and likes to have store buildout details worked out before announcing a target opening date, as the Lo-Down has noted.

From the look of it, the retail space at EVE has some work left before it's retail ready. It will be curious to see what impact this might have on the Associated directly across the street as well as the food-heavy Target a few hundred feet to the east.

Meanwhile, leasing continues at EVE, where the residential entrance is at 433 E. 13th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue. This development is on the site of the onetime Peter Stuyvesant Post Office (1951-2014).

Previously on EV Grieve:
UPDATED: Did you hear the rumor about the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office branch closing?

Former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office slated to be demolished

The former Peter Stuyvesant Post Office will yield to an 8-story residential building

All about EVE, the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office-replacing rentals on 14th Street

Claim: A Trader Joe's won't be coming to new development at 14th and A after all

Trader Joe's: No current plans for grocery at 432-438 E. 14th St.

Happy No. 20 to Lavagna!



Lavagna, the low-key Italian restaurant with an open kitchen at 545 E. Fifth St., celebrates its 20th anniversary today.

That's quite an achievement given how many buzzy restaurants come and go (have come and gone).

Here's a little bit of a review from over at The Infatuation:

The place has been in business since 1999, and it’s still busy every night. Chalk it up to an excellent and consistent menu of pastas and entrees that keep the regulars coming back, exceptional daily specials, and a really good wine list. It’s everything that you want a cozy Italian restaurant to be, and it’s not even all that expensive.

Lavagna, which is just west off of Avenue B, has remained one of my favorite neighborhood restaurants for these past 20 years. Congrats to Yorgos and the entire Lavagna family.

Bubbleology Tea debuts tomorrow with an Instagram Boomerang photo booth



The London-based Bubbleology Tea chain opens its EV outpost tomorrow at 120 1/2 First Ave. between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place.

As the Times noted last spring, this outpost "will feature milk- and fruit-based bubble tea blends including Oreo Crush, along with alcoholic brews including Raspberry Mar-Tea-Ni." Not to mention concoctions like bubble waffles and gelato.

Here's what is in store for tomorrow...


The latest iteration of the International Bar closed in this now-sanitized space in November 2017. (Non-renewal of lease, via landlord Steve Croman.) The bar merged with its sister saloon, the Coal Yard, down the block.