Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Sinkhole claims tree on 6th Street

The sidewalk- and tree pit-eating hole outside 338 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue has apparently claimed a victim — the small tree that was in the pit.

Several EVG readers have noted this latest development here in recent days... 
It's not known if, perhaps, workers removed the tree ahead of repair work ... or someone else decided to cut it down.

As we've noted four times previously: The sinkhole formed during the drenching rains from Tropical Storm Ida on Sept. 1.

Since then, a makeshift barrier including parts of Awash's outdoor dining space and other found objects have been guarding/blocking the sidewalk. Pedestrians must walk on Sixth Street on the south side of the street to bypass the sinkhole.

Several residents have told us that they have contacted 311, Community Board 3, Councilmember Carlina Rivera's office, the DOT, the 9th Precinct, etc., to report the sinkhole — and the swastikas someone added to the barrier a few weeks back.

CR7 Gourmet Deli opens on 1st Avenue

The CR7 Gourmet Deli has opened on the SE corner of First Avenue and Second Street. 

The 24/7 deli offers a variety of fresh-made sandwiches, salads, smoothies and juices... as well as your usual corner market fare.

CR7 takes over the space from Spiegel, the European-style cafe that closed in the summer of 2020 and was rumored to be returning here

As previously noted, this is now a competitive corner with Food You Desire 3, the Deli & Smoke Shop and another new arrival — the Manhattan Smoke Shop a few steps away on Second Street ...
As a P.S., the scary Seinfeld wheatpaste remains in place on the Second Street wall outside CR7...

Monday, December 6, 2021

Monday's parting shot

This holiday mural — an interpretation of Will Ferrell in "Elf" — went up over the weekend outside the Second Avenue F stop... work b@paolo_tolentino and @turtlecaps.

Flashback to last year's mural here.

A fundraiser under the stars for La Plaza Cultural on Thursday evening

The folks at La Plaza Cultural are hosting a winter fundraiser on Thursday evening for their solar pavilion at the community garden on the SW corner of Avenue C and Ninth Street. 

Per the invite:
We are raising money to install solar panels to power the garden and take us off-grid. The pavilion will also serve as a four-season classroom offering workshops for the community.
The event, from 7-9 p.m., will feature fresh-made Neapolitan pizza, seasonal drink offerings and s'mores from the Wayland, hot chocolate, tarot card readings, live music by Eric Hoffman and Ken Hatfield, and a raffle. 

You can find ticket info at this link.

Rent hike threatens Avenue C mainstay Casa Adela

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The future of Casa Adela at 66 Avenue C is potentially in jeopardy with a rent hike the owner says is not feasible. 

Friends and supporters of the restaurant that has served authentic Puerto Rican cuisine here between Fourth Street and Fifth Street since 1976 sounded the alarm last week, reaching out to media outlets and local elected officials.

 

According to organizers and other published accounts, the building's landlord — a Housing Development Fund Corporation (HDFC) — is looking to increase the rent from $1,350 to, eventually, $6,750. 

Nicholas Heller, aka @NewYorkNico, reported this:
The old lease expired a few years ago. Under it, they were paying $1350 per month for the 715 sq ft space. They offered their landlord, a limited equity HDFC cooperative, that they would start to pay $3000 per month, plus 3% increases for each year for 10 years. The landlord refused the offer: their bottom line is $4000 in year one (backdated to august) and $6,750 starting in year two of the lease, and 3% increases after that, which is a 480%+ increase in rent and sure to force the business to close.
On Thursday, community members met at the restaurant and created a Save Casa Adela Committee. 
For now, there is hope a deal can be worked out between owner Luis Rivera and HDFC reps. 

According to Frank Gonzalez of Loisaida Realty, who helped organize the Save Casa Adela Committee, the two sides will meet today. [UPDATE: The meeting is now at 6 p.m. on 12/8]

"[We] hope they can work out a fair deal for our beloved Casa Adela," he said. "As of right now, we are praying for the best but preparing for the worst."

They previously scheduled a press conference at the restaurant for tomorrow and a rally on Saturday morning. Gonzalez said that depending on what happens today, they'll move forward with both events.

Adela Fargas started her namesake business here in 1976.

Before opening Casa Adela at 66 Avenue C, she ran a luncheonette one block to the south. It was there, as a feature in The New York Times from 2015 points out, that she perfected the seasoning for her famed rotisserie chicken.

She died in January 2018 at age 81.

East River Park closing below Stanton Street as resiliency work moves forward

East River Park below Stanton Street shuts down today as the most significant work to date gets underway here on the $1.45 billion East Side Coastal Resiliency project.

According to the weekly construction bulletin, these park amenities will now be locked up to the public: the amphitheater, southern athletic fields, basketball courts, lawn and water play area, Delancey Street Bridge, Brian Watkins Tennis Center, and the dance circle. 

The bulletin states that the work includes "installation of protective fences and site preparation, including clearing and grubbing." East River Park Action reported that the city will start cutting down the trees in this area south of Stanton as early as tomorrow. Under the city's resiliency plan, they'll need to remove 1,000 trees in total from East River Park. 

Click on the map below for more details ... everything within the pinkish zone is closed as of today...
Also today, the construction will close the East River Greenway that runs along the FDR between Montgomery Street and 10th Street.
Looking at the city's advisory, it's not immediately apparent what cyclists traveling north are supposed to do upon arriving at Montgomery Street. Presumably, cyclists will have to turn on Pike at the Manhattan Bridge and head north along Allen, then to First Avenue across Houston, etc. ... 
Commuters need to use the Corlears Hook Bridge for public access to the ferry. 

Park amenities north of Stanton Street will remain open for public use, with access at East Houston Street, Sixth Street and 10th Street. The city has said they will maintain public access to a minimum of 42 percent of the park throughout construction.

Last week, the Appellate Division lifted the Temporary Restraining Order from Nov. 2 that had been in effect to halt construction.

Work began in Project Area 1 — between Montgomery Street and East 15th Street — on Nov. 1, focusing on the Brian Watkins Tennis Center

As previously reportedthe former Compost Yard was converted into green space to make up for some of the lost park access during construction/demolition over the next four-plus years. This lawn area is expected to be open for public use by the end of 2021. (The photo below is from Saturday.)   
Work continues in Project Area 2 between East 15 Street and 25th Street, including Asser Levy Playground, Stuyvesant Cove Park and Murphy Brothers Playground.

Construction on the East Side is expected to wrap up by the end of 2026.

Read our previous posts for more background on the ESCR and the opposition and controversy over the city's current plan.

East River Park Action and other activists say they will continue to fight for alternatives to preserve much of the park and provide interim flood control.

Updated 11 a.m.
There are reports of police arresting activists at the scene. The @1000people1000trees account is providing updates from the park.

Updated 5 p.m.
According to Gothamist, there were three arrests today. Activists say they plan to be back at it tomorrow.

PIX11 has coverage here.

Preparing the former B Bar & Grill for demolition on the Bowery

Plywood now surrounds the former B Bar & Grill on the Bowery at Fourth Street... signaling that the demolition of the one-level structure is likely imminent... 
As we first reported in January, permits were filed for a 21-floor mixed-use development — a 283-foot-tall office building. (For comparison, the Standard East Village, a block to the north, is 21 floors.) The city approved the permits on Nov. 16, per public records.

According to plans, the well-employed architect Morris Adjmi's building will encompass 98,799 square feet, with 26,000 square feet set aside as an unspecified community facility. 

As pointed out here in August, a billboard for the new building looms over the doomed property (right below the "Licorice Pizza" spot)... 
Meanwhile, here's a look through the blogger portal on the plywood...
CB Developers paid $59.5 million for a stake in 358-360 Bowery, a gas station before its conversion into the bar-restaurant. B Bar owner Eric Goode, who owns a handful of hotels, including the Bowery Hotel across the way, assembled air rights to build the more extensive development on this corner space. 

As for the B Bar, the one-time hot spot (circa the mid-1990s) was expected to close for good in August 2020. However, the place never reopened after the PAUSE in March 2020. On April 3, 2020, nearly 70 B Bar employees were laid off without any extension of benefits or offer of severance pay.


Caffè Bene has closed on Avenue A

The Caffè Bene outpost on the SE corner of Avenue A and 13th Street has closed. Workers cleared out the space last week (thank you to Steven for the photos)...
As we understand it, the family of this franchise owner, Rish Sheth, has a deli uptown, and they decided to combine the business. (We also heard the landlord was raising the rent by $2,000 a month here.)

The cafe arrived here in late 2015, offering a variety of coffee drinks, breakfast and lunch items, etc. 

In September 2020,  as part of a pandemic pivot, Sheth added a line of South Asian-inspired groceries and snacks, from bags of Masala Munch to boxes of Parle-G biscuits, alongside Caffe Béne's usual fare. He named this new part of the business Jaleby, which continues to have an online presence for deliveries here

This was one of two Caffè Bene franchises to open in the East Village in 2015. The location at 24 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue closed in April 2017 after 17 months of business. 

H/T Lola Sáenz... and thanks to Laura and dwg, who also shared photos last week. 

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Sunday's parting shot

Oscar season on St. Mark's Place today... photo by Derek Berg...

Rite Aid's formerly headless Santa SINGS

The world-famous Santa Claus at the Rite Aid on First Avenue and Fifth Street continues to surprise.

Turns out this Santa is animatronic as EVG contributor Stacie Joy discovered today ...

 

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a tree trick on Astor Place via Derek Berg) ...

• Report: Advocates lose appeal to halt East River Park demolition; temporary restraining order lifted (Wednesday

• PlantShed bringing flowers, plants and coffee to 2nd Avenue (Monday

• Barnyard Cheese Shop making a return as Barnyard Express with weekend-only service (Friday

• Meet The Acute (Thursday

• Happy birthday to the Tompkins Square Library branch! (Thursday

• Clare checks out "Night Moves" by Jacqueline Cedar at Shelter Gallery (Wednesday)

• A new NY See! (Thursday

• Local students distribute pre-Thanksgiving meals in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday

• Cutlets Sandwich Co. debuts on 3rd Avenue (Wednesday

• Ahimsa Garden has left the East Village (Monday

• Retail space comes into view at the former Hells Angels HQ (Thursday

• 2 restaurants opened and closed in 6 weeks at this space on 10th Street (Thursday

• Santa returns to Rite Aid this holiday season with his head intact (Wednesday

• Mug & Cup in soft-open mode on Avenue C (Tuesday

• Flamingos Vintage Pound checks out (Monday

• Openings: 75 Degrees Cafe & Bakery (Tuesday

• Here's your Smoke City Exotics signage on Avenue B (Friday)

• Happy holidays from Wegmans (Monday

• Bar None seized for nonpayment of taxes (Monday

• The VNYL has not been open in a long time (Tuesday)

• 1st Street Prune watch (Monday

... speaking on Prune, someone left this mod piece outside the restaurant over the weekend...
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Follow EVG on Instagram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.

An art fair at the Tompkins Square Library branch

That's a wrap on the fifth annual East Village Arts Festival at the Tompkins Square Library, a four-day event at the branch on 10th Street.

On Thursday afternoon, a group of local writers and artists were on hand with their work. EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by for a visit with ...

... Eve Packer and Ron Kolm... 
... Peter Carlaftes and Kat Georges... 
... Greg Masters...
... J. Scott Orr of B Scene Zine... 
 ... Ruth Oisteanu...
... Frank New...
...Delia Anne Parker...

... Carpo...
... Delphine le Goff...
... Sara Ann Rutherford...

A celebration of Our Lady of Guadalupe on 3rd Street

You may have noticed the colorful procession yesterday outside the Most Holy Redeemer/Nativity Parish on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.

It was a celebration of Our Lady of Guadalupe, also known as the Virgin of Guadalupe. (This was a prelude to the official Feast Day on Dec. 12.)

As NBC News reported back in 2019:
For Mexicans and Mexican-Americans as well as other Latinos, Our Lady of Guadalupe is a powerful symbol of devotion, identity, and patriotism. Her image inspires artists, activists, feminists and the faithful.

EVG contributor Stacie Joy shared these photos from the celebration... 

Saturday, December 4, 2021

Saturday's parting shot

A development to watch at the Rite Aid on First Avenue at Fifth Street... where the (formerly headless) Santa has been moved from the greeting cards section to inside the front doors 

In addition, EVG contributor Stacie Joy, who took this photo, noted in a not-alarming way that Santa's head is super wobbly ... meaning a headless Santa is once again a possibility ...

EVG Etc.: A deep dive on the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project; a night at House of X

• Michael Kimmelman, the architecture critic at the Times, checks in with a long read on the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project (The New York Times)

• With omicron variant concerns, Mayor de Blasio is considering second shot, booster vaccination mandate for NYC restaurants, concerts (Daily News) More about omicron in NYC (Gothamist

• In a lawsuit, the family of Jennifer Blumin, who died with her two young children in a plane crash in 2017, says her landlord contained to charge rent for her East 13th Street penthouse for several months after her death (The Post

• A feature on the Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis of Middle Collegiate Church on Second Avenue (The Times ... reminder: tomorrow, the church is marking the 1-year anniversary of the fire that destroyed its sanctuary on Second Avenue) 

• Residents of the Jacob Riis Houses say they are living with inconsistent heat and hot water and no gas service in their apartments (PIX11)

• Interviews with Council House Speaker candidates, including Carlina Rivera (City Limits

• A four-year-old piece of legislation before the City Council would enable more consistent scrutiny for placement in supportive housing (City Limits

• The legal battle continues at Children's Magical Garden on Norfolk and Stanton (The Post

• The fourth International Human Rights Arts Festival takes place Dec. 6-12 at Wild Project on Third Street near Avenue B (Official site

• Remembering 2 Bridges Music Arts on East Broadway and other long-gone record stores (Interlude Docs

• One night at House of X at the Public Hotel on Chrystie (The Cut)

• How They Might Be Giants — celebrating their 40th year — made "Birdhouse in Your Soul" (The Guardian ... read our 2011 Q&A with John Linnell)

EVG recent retail recap

A recap of some recent retail-related news... 

• The holiday market is open at 3rd & B'Zaar (Link

• Karen McDermott, who runs the March Hare with her husband Jason McGroarty, was diagnosed with colon cancer this fall. The toy store on Ninth Street also marked its first anniversary on Nov. 23. (Link

• A new storefront for P.J. O'Rourke II on Avenue B (Link

• Jo Laurie Loves debuts on Ninth Street (Link

• Leekan Designs winding down its operations on the Lower East Side (Link)
.
.. and there's an East Village Flea on First Avenue and First Street today (Dec. 4) from noon to 5 p.m. You can find vendor info @NexusFlea ...

Saturday's opening shot

Hey, there's an inflatable Santa after all this year here on the glorious NW corner of 14th Street and First Avenue (outside the now-closed Papaya Dog) ...

P.S. Bonus (accidental) photo from the very moment a FedEx truck passed by the corner...

Friday, December 3, 2021

Horse sense

 

The Chicago-based teen trio Horsegirl recently released this video for "Billy," a forthcoming 7-inch single (with a cover of the Minutemen's "History Lesson Part II" on side B) via their new label, Matador

The band has said the song is "a love letter to past music scenes we wish we could have witnessed."

Details on the Suffolk Street Solidarity fundraiser

Bluestockings Cooperative Bookstore and The Clemente Center are hosting a fundraiser on Dec. 8 — in person as well as via live stream. 

Here are some details about the event, held at The Clemente, via the EVG inbox...
Bluestockings has been part of the Lower East Side for 22 years and The Clemente for nearly 30. Bluestockings found a new home during the pandemic, and it's right across from The Clemente on Suffolk Street. We are thrilled to be neighbors and for all the possibilities this opens for us to work together. 
We're marking this new chapter with a joint fundraiser to mutually support each other's work and connect our already overlapping communities.

Speakers: Alok, Rita Indiana, Molly Crabapple, Yin Q, Victoria Law
Performers: Claudi of PincLouds and Choked Up (with Cristy Road)

Raffle Items: We have coveted items and great gifts which include thematically curated bundles from Bluestockings merch, Hardcover coffee table books donated by the Museum of the City of New York, tickets and passes to plays and concerts donated by Teatro SEA, and Arts for Art, and more.

Suffolk Street Solidarity is a celebration of our communities that will support our spaces' continued survival and shared commitment to solidarity work. Our fundraising goal of $70k will be split equally between Bluestockings & The Clemente.
Find ticket information and more information about the fundraiser at this link

The Clemente Center is located at 107 Suffolk St. at Rivington.