Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Cemetery wall knocked down during post-fire work behind 1st Avenue



A tipster points us to the East Side Outside Community Garden on 11th Street just east of First Avenue.

In recent months, workers have accessed the garden space to gain entry to the rear of 188 First Ave., which suffered a major fire last October.

While the structural stability of No. 188 was reportedly unaffected by the fire, the extension behind the permanently closed Uogashi needed to be removed.

Of concern to the tipster: The stone wall dating to the 1860s that lines the garden has been badly damaged during the work behind the First Avenue buildings...





Preservationists believe this is the western wall of a long-vanished cemetery.


[Map from 1867]

Here's what the wall looked like a few years ago...



The Village Preservation wrote about this cemetery back in 2013 (at the time, they were trying to spare part of the property from what became the luxury condoplex Steiner East Village).

While the cemetery opened in 1833, where the wall is located did not become the western boundary of the cemetery until the 1860s, and thus there may not have been a wall here prior to then. The cemetery remained on this site until 1909, so the wall also could have been built as late as the first years of the last century.

After the cemetery closed in 1909, the land was divided up and much of it sold. The eastern section became Mary Help of Christians Church (1917) and School (1925)

The school and church were demolished in 2013.

7th Street townhouse with rooftop pizza oven and basketball hoop sells for $15.75 million


[Image via Streeteasy]

The single-family townhouse at 64 E. Seventh St. has sold after nearly a year on the market.

The Real Deal noted the sale last week for the home between First Avenue and Second Avenue. Per TRD, an entity tied to William N. Joy — principal of a Florida-based investment firm Water Street Capital Inc. — paid $15.75 million for the property, which had an original ask of $18 million.

According to Streeteasy, No. 64 has five fireplaces, terraces off of the dining room and master bedroom, and rooftop garden with — why not? — a pizza oven and basketball hoop.

The sellers were two trusts and Lisa J. Fox.

The building received a gut renovation in 2010 that saw the removal of its longtime storefront.

Jeremiah Moss explored the building's history in this post from 2010.

Past occupants of 64 E. Seventh St. include:
• The parsonage for St. Mark's Evangelical Lutheran Church
• The newspaper Russky Golos ("Russian Voice")
• The Les Deux Megots coffeehouse, whose readings featured Allen Ginsberg, Paul Blackburn and Carol Berge
• The Paradox, "said to be the world's first macrobiotic restaurant" where both Yoko Ono and folksinger Loudon Wainwright III worked
• Books 'N Things
• Tokio 7 (moved across the street)

Future tech hub demo watch



EVG regular Pinch passes along word that the former PC Richard & Son on 14th Street appears to be fully gutted ...



Per the 14th @ Irving website, here's what to expect on site this week:

[T]he team is anticipated to continue with selective hand demolition on the interior and exterior of the building ... the demolition team will start major hand demolition of the building from the east and west elevation working toward the middle of the building. This will include concrete chopping and torching the metal decks.

As you know, this is the future site of the 22-story Union Square Tech Training Center (aka tech hub) here at Irving Place. Our previous post has the back story.

Piccolo Cafe closes on 3rd Avenue



Piccolo Cafe closed after service back on Friday at 157 Third Ave. between 15th Street and 16th Street. (Thanks to EVG reader @bigpoppaeats for the tip.)

The small Italian cafe, which offered a variety of homemade pastries, sandwiches and salads, had been at this spot for 10 years.

Ownership didn't offer a reason for the closure in the goodbye note posted to the front door.



Piccolo Cafe has three other NYC locations.

Il Mattone's East Houston outpost is now open



Il Mattone's third Manhattan outpost debuted Saturday over at 147 E. Houston St. at Eldridge.

We thought they we taking the full freshly renovated corner space, as the Post first reported last November.



In any event, they are serving their Neapolitan-style pies, pasta, sandwiches and salads from the space that was roughly part of the former Lucky Burger.

The well-regarded Il Mattone first opened in Tribeca in 1992.

And here's a photo of their offerings from their Beach Street location...

Imogene Beauty Salon arrives on 7th Street



The Imogene Beauty Salon is the new tenant at 80 E. Seventh St. ... replacing O.O.T.D., the women's boutique that opened last summer here between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

The previous previous tenant, East Village Cheese, closed here without any notice in December 2017 after two-plus years at this address.

Monday, May 27, 2019

Manhattanhenge 2019: the sun is also a star


[Photo on 14th Street from July 2016 by @WonderlandNYC]

ICYMI: Here are your clip-and-save Manhattanhenge dates for 2019...

• Wednesday, May 29 at 8:13 p.m., you will see a “half sun” — half above and half below the landscape.
• Thursday, May 30th at 8:12 p.m., you will see a “full sun,” with the entire solar disk resting above the horizon.

If you’ll miss out in May, then you’ll get a second chance in July:

• Thursday, July 11 at 8:20 p.m. (full sun)
• Friday, July 12 at 8:21 p.m. EDT (half sun)

Manhattanhenge occurs when the setting sun aligns with the numbered streets that run east and west on the city grid. Here's a quickie video explainer for more:



And as Gothamist reported, this year's Manhattanhenge news release via the American Museum of Natural History doesn't make any mention of Neil deGrasse Tyson, the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium who coined the term.

While the Museum has kept quiet on the matter, last year Tyson's name hit the headlines when he was accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women.

The Museum said it was investigating the accusations, though it hasn't released any further information.

First word: Believe on the Bowery Mural Wall



Queen Andrea started work on the Bowery Mural Wall on Saturday... here's an in-progress look...



She's known for her bright color palettes and lively geometric motifs.

And a sampling of her work...


Updated 6/9

And the final product...




Memorial Day rush



About 8 a.m. on Second Avenue at Seventh Street...

Sunday, May 26, 2019

At the 32nd annual Loisaida Festival



It was a perfect summer day today for the 32nd annual Loisaida Festival on Avenue C.

EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by the festival earlier today and shared these photos of the vendors, patrons and performers taking part in the annual Memorial Day weekend gathering...











































Week in Grieview


[Photo in Tompkins Square Park yesterday by Derek Berg]

Posts from this past week included...

Behold these murals uncovered behind the bar at the former Grassroots Tavern on St. Mark's Place (Tuesday)

It's official: San Loco is returning to the East Village (Thursday)

Parents, students ride together in bid for 2-way protected bike lane on Avenue B (Tuesday)

At the first WPA Arts exhibition (Thursday)

The latest I Am a Rent-Stabilized Tenant (Thursday)

H Mart won't open now until June 3 (Friday)

Happy 1-month anniversary, red-tailed hawklets of Tompkins Square Park (Monday)

Looks like a Flamingos Vintage Pound is coming to 1st Avenue (Tuesday)

No Dollface for the former Bar Virage space on 2nd Avenue (Monday)

The former Thaimee Table space is for rent (Monday)


[A Fleet Week Moment outside McSorely's via Adrian Wilson]

A new sign for Casey Rubber Stamps (Thursday)

Call me by your...: Gallery-cafe combo By Name opening on the Bowery (Monday)

A moment with the Party Bus Express on Avenue A this morning (Wednesday)

1-floor expansion planned for Avenue A building that housed the Sidewalk (Wednesday)

Sugar Sketch has closed on 2nd Street (Monday)

250 E. Houston St. is changing colors (Friday)

Former UCBeast space for rent on Avenue A (Wednesday)

Spiritea debuts on 2nd Avenue (Friday)

Reader report: Martial arts for the empty storefront on 11th and C (Wednesday)

Spring scenes from Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday)

The Blind Pig wraps up 13 years on 14th Street (Monday)

Empty Avenue B storefront yields psychic adviser (Tuesday)

The Alley signage arrives on Cooper Square; more bubble tea on the way (Monday)

The FryGuys space is for rent on 2nd Street (Friday)

... and a Keith Haring wheatpaste on Second Street by the Postman...



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St. Mark's Place Sinkhole Alert



Helping prevent potential pothole/sinkhole disaster with cones and cubed shelving here on St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Second Avenue...



At a previously documented sinkhole spot.

An honest post-DOH inspection reaction



Ten Degrees Bistro at 121 St. Mark's Place got dinged during a DOH inspection this past Thursday ... with the city agency forcing a closure after finding 48 violation points. (No. 1 item listed: "Food worker does not use proper utensil to eliminate bare hand contact with food that will not receive adequate additional heat treatment.")



And the management's meme-generated reaction ...

Saturday, May 25, 2019

Queen Andrea next for the Bowery Mural Wall



Queen Andrea, an NYC-based muralist, typographer and graphic designer, is starting work today on the Bowery Mural Wall at East Houston.

She's known for her bright color palettes, lively geometry motifs and creative pattern mashups. Check out her Instagram account to see what we might expect to see here.

Queen Andrea taking over after the five-month tenure of TATS CRU.

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Updated 5/27

WIP...





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And when the wall was blank here the other day...