Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Hey, it's primary election day!

The first of two 2022 primary elections is today (June 28) for state and Assembly offices. The primaries for congressional (including the 10th Congressional District with candidates including de Blasio, Rivera, etc.) and state Senate openings were pushed back to Aug. 23 due to New York State redistricting issues. 

Polls are open today from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. Find your poll site via this link (unless you voted early already!). 

Anyway, you likely know about the race for governor, lieutenant governor and the Assembly. There's also a lesser-known slate of judicial candidates. City & State has a primer on those races. You can find a regiular ol' primary primer via the Times right here

Screengrab courtesy of Duran Duran side project Arcadia... the best Duran Duran side project aside from the Power Station.

City pools open TODAY

Dozens of outdoor city pools reopen for the season TODAY ... locally, this means the Hamilton Fish Pool on Pitt and East Houston (above, as seen on Saturday), the Dry Dock Pool on 10th Street and Avenue D and the Tompkins Square Park mini pool... which workers were filling on Sunday morning (don't forget to skim the pool for leaves and beers!) ... 
Every year, we hear from people who had no idea there was a mini pool in Tompkins Square Park. The mini pool is open for children and their parents-guardians. 

If this helps with location ...
Outdoor hours are from 11 a.m. through 7 p.m. daily, with a break for pool cleaning between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Find more info about city pools at this link. The mini pool is open until Labor Day, with the larger pools in service through Sept. 11.

And an important — and unfortunate — note about pool programming this summer: "Due to the current national lifeguard shortage, all swim programs, including lap swim, senior swim, and Learn to Swim, have been canceled for summer 2022."

Blank Street continues East Village expansion with outpost on 1st Avenue

Updated July 1: This branch is now open

A new location of Blank Street coffee is coming to the NE corner of First Avenue at 13th Street (opposite the Starbucks on the NW corner).

Blank Street also carries products from local brands, including King Street Baking Co. and King David Tacos

Our previous post (here) has more background about Blank Street.

This will make the fourth outpost in the EV area for the fast-growing coffee brand. Last fall saw the arrival of branches at 149 Avenue A ...36 Third Ave. ... and in the Bowery Market

This storefront was last a GNC, which shuttered in the summer of 2020. 

Cafe Joah debuts on Avenue A

Several readers have pointed out that Cafe Joah is in soft-open mode at 212 Avenue A just north of 13th Street. (Thanks to Brian Carroll for this photo; also to Russell K and Isa for sending pics.) 

Cafe Joah is serving coffee and pastries now... with plans for sandwiches and salads in a few weeks. You can follow the Cafe's Instagram account for updates.

Ownership here was also behind the previous tenant in the space, Fat Buddha. NY State suspended the bar's liquor license in the fall of 2020 for "egregious violations of coronavirus-related regulations." CB3 denied Fat Buddha's application for a new liquor license in June 2021, per public records. 

For now, ownership is focusing on the cafe business.

Monday, June 27, 2022

Monday's parting shots

Photos by Steven

Here are two of Amelia and Christo's 2022 red-hawk fledglings in Tompkins Square Park... looking for something...

Treetops tops off on 2nd Avenue; signage arrives

Here's a look at the 10-floor condoplex called Treetops at 14 Second Ave. at Houston (and adjacent to First Street Green Art Park).

Sidewalk bridge signage arrived this past week about the full-floor residences...
Nothing too exciting. Some legalese about the development, "The complete offering terms are in an Offering Plan available from Sponsor. File # CD21-0103" etc. No sign of floor plans, descriptions of the, say, Siberian Marble Herringbone heated flooring in the closets, pricing, etc.

As we've been reporting, preliminary work on the luxury condo building started in January 2019, and the completion date is listed as July 2022.

This site has been vacant for years, last housing Irreplaceable Artifacts until its demolition by the city in July 2000. There's a lot of back story, which the links below cover...

Compilation Coffee coming to St. Mark's Place

Signage is up now for Compilation Coffee at 102 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue... (thanks to Steven for the photos!)...
This is the first location for the retail coffee outpost. There's a placeholder website (where you can sign up for a newsletter).

Noah Jashinski, a "specialty coffee consultant" who has worked with Intelligentsia, Blue Bottle and Stumptown, is a co-founder. 

There's a "summer/fall" opening date on the CC Instagram page

The previous tenant here, Baked Cravings, a bakery that specialized in fresh-baked nut- and peanut-free desserts, went dark at the start of the year after a September 2020 debut. Dun-Well Doughnuts was here previously.

Raclette reopens on June 29

Say cheese: Raclette lives on at 511 E. 12th St. 

Earlier this month, a closed sign appeared on the door here between Avenue A and Avenue B. Owner Edgar Villongco also confirmed the closing news with Eater.

However, a new sign now notes a temporary closure... with a reopening on Wednesday, July June 29. There isn't any further explanation about the closure at the moment. (Updated: Villongco told Eater it was insurance-related.) 

The restaurant, which serves French and Swiss Raclette, Croques and Tartine, opened in a 14-seat space on Avenue A in February 2015... before moving to these larger confines in September 2016.

Thanks to the folks at the East Village Community Coalition for the photo!

Brooklyn Roasting Company opens a cafe inside the Strand

On Saturday, the Strand Bookstore celebrated its 95th year in business ... and on this day, the Strand's flagship location near Union Square officially debuted a cafe on the ground floor with coffee drinks and pastries via Brooklyn Roasting Company. (The outpost also sells tins of a Strand blend of coffee.)

"Bringing coffee to our customers has been a long-time dream for the Strand," CCO Laura Ravo said in a press release about the opening. 

The Strand, 828 Broadway at 12th Street, is open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Sunday, June 26, 2022

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a photo from the start of the Drag March Friday by Derek Berg) ...

• At the rally to go 'All Out For Abortion Rights' (Saturday
 
• 1st Avenue old-timer Royal Bangladesh Indian Restaurant has closed (Tuesday)

• RIP Pilar Limosner (Thursday) ... Celebrating the life of longtime community garden activist Clyde Romero (Tuesday

• Drag March recap (Saturday and Saturday

• Details about an hours-long break-in at CC Cyclery & Co. on 13th Street (Tuesday

• Reader report: Tarallucci e Vino has closed (Tuesday

• The Gem Spa signage shines brightly in this Ohio farmhouse (Thursday

• At the Zine Fair on St. Mark's Place (Monday

• Report: Concern over the potential sale of the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary (Monday

• Los Tacos NYC has apparently closed on 7th Street (Thursday

• A bakery called Butterdose is coming soon to 13th Street (Wednesday

• 50 years of 'Deep Throat' (Sunday

• The Green Room setting up a CBD shop on 9th Street (Thursday) ... Titan's Greenery Arts, a '420 friendly gallery,' debuts on 9th Street (Wednesday

• A soft opening for Xeo Cantina on the Bowery (Wednesday)

• Taco Bell grandly opens on 3rd Avenue and 13th Street (Tuesday

• Why is the SE corner of 2nd Avenue and 5th Street a dumping ground for artificial Christmas trees? (Monday

... and yesterday, the Japanese Folk Dance Institute of NY performed on Avenue B between Eighth and Ninth streets ... (photo by Stacie Joy) ... check out the Loisaida Open Streets Instagram account for upcoming events...
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Follow EVG on Instagram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.

At the 2022 Dyke March

Images by Stacie Joy 

On this Pride weekend, the 30th annual edition of the Dyke March took place yesterday, with thousands of participants marching down Fifth Avenue from Bryant Park to Washington Square Park. 

The official site notes that this is a protest march, not a parade: 
The March is a demonstration of our First Amendment right to protest and takes place without permits or sponsors. We recognize that we must organize among ourselves to fight for our rights, safety and visibility.

Thousands of Dykes take the streets each year in celebration of our beautiful and diverse Dyke lives, to highlight the presence of Dykes within our community, and in protest of the discrimination, harassment, and violence we face in schools, on the job, and in our communities. 
Organizer Nate Shalev talked about the march's diversity with Gothamist:
There's just simply no other space like it, where trans dykes, butch dykes, femme dykes, all dykes feel like they have a space where they can be who they are and celebrate who they are. And that means being angry, and that means being joyful, and you don't have to be anything except whatever the thing is you are."
There was a heightened feeling of fury yesterday following the seismic ruling by the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade. EVG contributor Stacie Joy was on lower Fifth Avenue and in Washington Square Park for the March... 
Back to Gothamist: 
Celebrations around the Washington Square Park fountain after the long, hot trek accurately reflect what march participants feel at the end of the road, Shalev confirmed: "It's always really wonderful, because it's allowing dykes to exist in whatever space they need."
Previously this weekend on EV Grieve

Sunday's opening shots

Photos by Stacie Joy

In-progress shots of a new mural by Bianca Romero at the Lower East Side People's Federal Credit Union on Avenue B at Third Street ... it will be finished soon... 

Sunday's opening video clip

 

Filling the Tompkins Square Park mini pool this morning... City pools open on Tuesday.

Saturday, June 25, 2022

Saturday's parting shot

As seen on Second Avenue at Fifth Street today... photo by Derek Berg...

At the rally to go 'All Out For Abortion Rights'

Images by Stacie Joy

Thousands of people gathered to "voice their fears and anger" in Washington Square Park early last evening hours after the Supreme Court officially reversed Roe v. Wade, declaring that the constitutional right to abortion upheld for nearly 50 years no longer exists.

Published reports put the crowd size between 10,000 and 17,000. 

EVG contributor Stacie Joy shared these photos ...
The assembled protestors eventually split off into different groups, with some going up Fifth Avenue to Union Square, where many continued on to Midtown ... while others headed downtown to Foley Square before eventually crossing the Brooklyn Bridge...