Monday, September 5, 2022

An end-of-summer appreciation: InCircles

Photos and interview by Stacie Joy 

We’re hearing from some neighborhood residents about how much they enjoy the free summer concerts in Tompkins Square Park and the joy they bring. 

In an ongoing series looking at musicians busking, we focus on InCircles, who have been providing, along with a newly formed production company ShowBrain, summer weekend concerts locally.
InCircles are Jewlee Trudden on vocals and guitar, Ozzie Silva on drums, and Matt Middleton on bass. After a recent show, I talked with the band about their history together and why playing Tompkins is so important to them. 

What is the band’s origin story? 

Jewlee: I started the band under various monikers in high school. After many band members coming and going over the years, Ozzie and I eventually came together and realized it was a partner-in-crime situation. Dream team and whatnot. We started playing together a year or so before Stable 8 EP came out in 2015. 

However, the members of InCircles have all played music in multiple projects and met in the local music scene, eventually playing a show together in our respective bands. 

Ozzie: Yeah, Jewlee and I played a show together while I was playing guitar in a small punk band called Stupid Naturals. We shared the same bill with InCircles, stayed connected, and a few months later, when they needed a drummer, I tried out and nailed the audition! We took a break for a part of 2019 and all of 2020, but we’re back at it now. Full force! 

How would you describe your sound? And how did the InCircles name come to be? 

Jewlee: Honestly, the band name came to be in a not-super-deep way. I think I saw it written on a window or something and was like, “eh, that’s kinda cool...” It’s not a Sunny Day Real Estate reference. A lot of people ask that. Sorry y’all. 

However, it’s taken on a deeper meaning over time. Which honestly feels kind of cooler to me. It can be an in-flux kind of thing. Right now, to me, it means everything comes full circle. Maybe time isn’t linear. It’s easy to fall back into old habits; come back to relationships, romantic or otherwise, that maybe should’ve been left behind. Energy can’t be created or destroyed. Plenty of different applications; maybe the listener can decide for themselves what it means. I’d describe our sound as a fruity and bloody blend of high-energy rock-n-roll with some punk thrown in.
You play a lot in the East Village, yet band members don’t live in the neighborhood. What draws you to the area? Why is Tompkins Square Park especially meaningful as a place to play? 

Ozzie: It’s New York City! We’re so lucky to live in a city with such a diverse group of people who appreciate the music and arts. It’s harder to convince people to come to a venue and much easier to bring the music to the people and create a following from there. Especially considering [the pandemic during] 2020 and 2021. A lot of people do not like to go to venues because of the fear of Covid, so it was much easier to play out in open spaces. Plus, it can be more fun than the traditional circuit! And Tompkins Square Park is a classic one. So many bands paved the way for us there. 

I caught a set of yours at ABC No Rio maybe eight years ago or so, a very high-energy punk show. How has the band’s sound changed since then? 

Ozzie: I’m not sure how much it’s changed yet to the public. We’re working on new songs so we’ll let the people decide from there.

What’s next for the band? 

Ozzie: Recording and releasing some singles, touring in the fall and continuing to play and connect with other bands!
You can keep up with the band on Instagram

And leaving you with the band's cover of "Blister in the Sun" ...

  

Why Blank Street Coffee seems everywhere, and maybe that's not a good thing

Photo on Avenue A from last fall

ICYMI: Several EVG readers passed along this piece from the Times last week titled "It's Not Just You — Blank Street Coffee Is Suddenly Inescapable." 

Four outposts (Avenue A, First Avenue, Third Avenue and the Bowery Market) have arrived in the East Village since last fall. 

Per the Times:
The rapid expansion has piqued the interest of New Yorkers, who became especially alert to changes in the streetscape during the pandemic. When word got out that Blank Street is not an independent chain like Variety or Bean & Bean, but an enterprise with global ambitions backed by private equity financing, many became curious — and sometimes suspicious.
And...
To fuel that growth, Blank Street raised $67 million last year; investors include high-profile venture capital funds like General Catalyst and Tiger Global, the founders of Allbirds and Warby Parker, and the real estate giant Tishman Speyer 
With that kind of backing, [co-founders] Mr. [Issam] Freiha and Mr. [Vinay] Menda had anticipated rapid growth. They did not anticipate that by debuting in Williamsburg and advertising their support for local business, they would invite the kind of scrutiny normally reserved for Met Gala outfits and Mets pitchers. Skeptics, who see Blank Street as an avatar of gentrification and automation, and resent the use of Wall Street money to compete with local businesses, have aired their objections on social media.
@livlaskowski i physically can’t stop myself from commenting on niche coffee news I’m sorry #blankstreet ♬ Just a Cloud Away - Pharrell Williams
Back to the Times... 
Jalen Williams, a product support engineer, stopped going to Blank Street soon after the very first brick-and-mortar shop opened on Bedford Avenue in his neighborhood. "People realized they were just here to check the Williamsburg box," he said.
As Eater pointed out in its brief — titled "The Oppressive Blah-ness of the Blank Street Coffee Chain" — about the article, Blank Street "has the potential to threaten mom-and-pop coffee shops." 

And how does it stack up against other chains? Per the Times, a 16-ounce Blank Street iced latte costs $4.25; at Dunkin’, $3.75; and at Starbucks, $5.50.

Sunday, September 4, 2022

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included ... (with a photo Thursday on Seventh Street by Derek Berg) ... 


• Report: Unsafe levels of arsenic found in the drinking water at Riis Houses; when did city officials know? (Saturday

• The Boys' Club has moved out of its longtime home on 10th Street and Avenue A (Monday

• Tenant concern as longtime family-owned residential buildings sell for $58 million (Thursday

• Essex Card Shop reopens on TUESDAY (Thursday

• Bands we like — Jade Tourniquet (Friday

• The Green Bench is stolen from the TF in Tompkins Square Park; 'this shit is an act of WAR' (Monday

• Highlights from Day 1 of Keyapalooza (Saturday)

• Claim: City cuts down tree on 5th Street after block association receives permission for pruning (Tuesday

• New at Ray's Candy Store: The corn dog (Tuesday)

• In the mood for autumn: Fall Into the City debuts at 3rd & B'zaar (Tuesday)

• A name change for Yoli Restaurant on 3rd Street (Wednesday

• Madame Vo team opening Monsieur Vo on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday

• Sanshi Noodle House looks closed (Tuesday

• The pits: Workers digging in for the future office building at 1 St. Mark's Place (Thursday

• Foxface closing Friday ahead of a move to new Avenue A space (Tuesday

• Why Panda Express isn't open yet on 14th and 1st (Thursday

• What's going in at the renovated 316 Bowery? (Monday

• City removes Poco's outdoor dining structures (Monday

... and headlines we didn't get around to posting: What the duck?
---

Follow EVG on Instagram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.

Report: Inside the fight to save Theatre 80 on St. Mark's Place

ICYMI: Journalist Katerina Barton filed a good piece for Gothamist on Theatre 80 owners Lorcan and Genie Otway and the legal battle to save the historic Theatre 80 on St. Mark’s Place. 

An excerpt: 
When the March 2020 pandemic lockdowns shuttered entertainment and hospitality industries everywhere, Otway couldn’t make his loan payments. In November 2020 he tried to negotiate an extension on the loan. He learned that his debt had been sold to Maverick Real Estate Partners. His interest rate had jumped from 10% to 24%. Maverick did not respond to requests for comment. 

Last December, Otway filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which would have allowed him to reorganize his finances and pay off the debt with future profits. But a bankruptcy court trustee said they didn't believe the theater, museum, and bar had enough income to make that plan work. Now the court has ordered the properties to be sold.

For the Otways, this solution isn’t viable. They live in an apartment upstairs along with other tenants in the building. “We would lose our future and our past,” Otway said. “You can imagine the nightmare we’re facing — it’s Kafkaesque.” 
Read the full piece here.

Who wood you pick?

Many people weighed in about this discarded wood carving found on First Avenue and 14th Street yesterday

These are among the many responses to who was immortalized (then abandoned!) on this slab of wood... 

• Ben Franklin 
• Daniel Boone 
• Christopher Columbus 
• St. Thomas Moore 
• Lethal Weapon-era Mel Gibson 
• Vigo, the Carpathian 
• Lord Farquad 
• Random guy who had this done at a county fair 
• Viggo Mortensen 
• Kurt Vonnegut 
• The Quaker Oats guy (maybe on a meth bender?)
• Cesar Romero 
• Leonard Bernstein 
• Liberace 
• "My neighbor when I was a kid in Miami." 
• Paul Krasner 
• Barbara Bush 
• "Someone else who pissed off Jabba the Hutt." 

Saturday, September 3, 2022

[Updated]: Unsafe levels of arsenic found in the drinking water at Riis Houses; when did city officials know?

Updated below

The NYCHA has said it has found traces of arsenic in the tap water at the Jacob Riis Houses on Avenue D. 

Signs in circulation around the complex between Sixth Street and 13th Street starting last night warned residents not to drink the water or use it for cooking indefinitely. According to the posted notices, the levels of arsenic are above levels considered safe by EPA standards.

In a bombshell report by The City, NYC officials were informed of tests showing traces of arsenic two weeks ago. However, officials didn't react until last night when the news outlet asked about the findings. 

Mayor Adams showed up to distribute bottled water at the Riis Houses last night around 10 ... An NYCHA spokesperson said the results from the tests only came back yesterday. Per Gothamist
Levels of arsenic above 10 parts per billion can cause vomiting, nausea, diarrhea, paralysis, and blindness, and prolonged exposure can lead to several types of cancer, according to the EPA. The mayor's office declined to say how high arsenic levels detected were. 

Over 2,600 people live at the Jacob Riis Houses.
Updated 9/5

Here's more from a new story at The City:

According to an internal NYCHA email obtained by THE CITY, DOHMH [Department of Health & Mental Hygiene] doesn’t believe the contaminant emanates from the water supply but is somehow coming from the plumbing system at Riis itself. 

A key concern for DOHMH is whether construction from ongoing work related to damage inflicted 10 years ago by Superstorm Sandy, as well as current work on the development’s heating system, have stirred up the soil and contributed to the contamination of the water.  

From CBS New York:

NYCHA's federally imposed watchdog monitor, Bart Schwartz, notified NYCHA officials to "ensure the integrity of any inquiry," and for the safety of residents "preserve all documents related to this issue"... including electronic and paper communications, test results and timelines. 

Highlights from Day 1 of Keyapalooza

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Yesterday marked the first day of Key Food's celebration of the renovated grocery on Avenue A and Fourth Street.

EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by for a look at the festivities, which included a variety of samples and giveaways...
Rocco Mileo, director of operations for Key Food parent company MAN-Dell Food Stores, Inc., was also here for the occasion. He said that if the community has a need that is not met by the store, to let management know ...
The grand reopening (it was never closed, as we've pointed out) activities continue today and tomorrow... as well as Sept. 9-11.

Rev. Billy's 'Earth Church' returns to Avenue C with Amazon Labor Union leader Chris Smalls

After a late-summer hiatus, Reverend Billy and the Stop Shopping Choir are back with Earth Church services tomorrow (Sunday!) at 36 Avenue C at Third Street (at the former Capital One space). 

Chris Smalls, who helped unionize Amazon's JFK8 warehouse in Staten Island... and established the Amazon Labor Union, will join the Earth Church at 3 p.m.

The services will also be available via a livestream here.

Last weekend of the season for the Tompkins Square Park mini pool

Another summer comes to a close at the Tompkins Square Park mini pool. (And yes — Tompkins Square Park has a mini pool for children and their guardians...) 

According to the Parks Department, the city's mini pools "will close on Labor Day." We're not sure if that means they close Monday, and Sunday is the last day. Or! They close at the end of the day on Monday. 

Anyway, today and tomorrow (and maybe Monday!), pool hours are from 11 a.m. through 7 p.m., with a break for pool cleaning between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. 

No word on the status of the Tompkins Square Swim Team in the off-season.

Saturday's opening shot

Inexplicably discarded at your favorite intersection, 14th Street and First Avenue. 

And trying to figure out who this is... Benjamin Franklin? "Lethal Weapon"-era Mel Gibson? The person you always thought was hiding under your bed as a kid? 

Polling open until 9 p.m.

Friday, September 2, 2022

Endless summer!

 

From 2014, here's the seasonal "Summer Ends" via the underappreciated Danish band the Raveonettes ... 

Bands we like — Jade Tourniquet

Photos by Stacie Joy

We saw Jade Tourniquet play live several times this summer... short, high-intensity sets in Tompkins Square Park... a handful of songs with a heavy metal-cum-gutter-punk sound. (Their Instagram describes them as "haze gaze punk rock-n-rollers," which also works.) 

The band members are vocalist-bassist Sasha...
... guitarist Mitch ...
... and drummer Frankie...
The three live in other parts of the city, but they always end up in the East Village. (Mitch has been seen busking outside Search & Destroy on St. Mark's Place.) The three also work shifts at Ray's Candy Store on Avenue A. 

EVG contributor Stacie Joy recently spent some time with the band before a recent show in Tompkins Square Park...
For now, Jade Tourniquet is on a local hiatus, as the members are returning to school in the northeast, so you could catch them in Boston or Providence or somewhere else in the months ahead ...
The band recently spent time recording songs, so there's a new EP in the works (a follow-up to the spring EP Bile Study). There's also a promise of some merch. 

Keep tabs on the band's Instagram account for updates on upcoming shows and all other things Jade Tourniquet. And we look forward to seeing them back here someday soon.

The 6-day-long Key Food grand reopening begins TODAY

Photos by Stacie Joy 

The flags are flying. The bunting is in place. Today is Day 1 of the six-day, two-weekend-long grand reopening ("RE-GRAND Opening" on some signage) at Key Food on Avenue A and Fourth Street. 

The six dates: Sept. 2-4 and Sept. 9-11.

As previously reported, the grocery has completed a near-year-long interior renovation, which included new lighting, flooring and freezer(ing). There is also the expanded produce department, which looks sharp ... all alongside Key faves, like the "cakes for any occasion" cakes. 

(And not to dampen the celebratory mood, but Key was never actually closed during the renovations.)

Anyway! There will be raffles, giveaways, and some savings if you spend a certain amount (Loyalty Club Card required!)
... and a closer look...
It may be best to buy the six-day pass for the whole Keychella experience. The pass allows access to the venue, day parking lots, and VIP areas, which offer specialty food & drink vendors, air-conditioned restrooms, shaded seating areas and full cash bars*.

If you attend the fall event of the fall, be sure to tag us in your social posts #Keyapalooza.

*Oops. This is actually info for Coachella 2023.

Thursday, September 1, 2022

[Updated] 26-year-old man shot and killed this afternoon outside 3 Haven Plaza

Photos by Garrett Rosso

Police are investigating the shooting death of a 26-year-old man this afternoon outside 3 Haven Plaza between Avenue C and Avenue D. 

According to witnesses, the victim was on a Citi Bike at the time of the shooting around 1:30 p.m. in the area near 12th Street and 13th Street.  (Updated: New info states that the Citi Bike was found at the scene, but it's unclear if anyone was riding it at the time of the shooting.)
NY1 reported that the man, whose identity has not been revealed, was pronounced dead at NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue. 

Police at the scene recovered three shell casings...
Police and published reports stated that the suspect is a man in his 20s who was wearing all black and a face mask. Police officials told ABC 7 that the victim had been targeted by the gunman.

The circumstances leading up to the shooting in unknown at the moment.
In an unrelated shooting early this morning, a 25-year-old woman was shot and killed on 14th Street at Irving Place. That shooting remains under investigation.

Updated 9/2

The Post reports that the victim was an alleged Money Boy Gang member.
The gunman blasted him four times in the head as he walked out of an apartment building, according to cops and the sources. 

Video reviewed by investigators shows that the gunman walked back and forth after he shot the victim, then kicked him multiple times in the head, sources said. 

 


[Updated] Reports: 25-year-old woman shot and killed on 14th Street and Irving Place

Post updated below. Photo from 9/3 at the scene of the shooting.

Police are investigating the fatal shooting of a 25-year-old woman early this morning on 14th Street at Irving Place. 

According to published reports and police sources, the shooting occurred just after 5 a.m. on the NW corner of 14th Street and Irving Place — near Chipotle. 

Per PIX11
The suspected shooter, who remained at large Thursday morning, was described by police as a heavyset man who wore all black clothing and a mask. Investigators said that they were also seeking a woman, though a description of her, as well as her alleged connection to the slaying, were not immediately specified.
We will update the post when more information becomes available. 

Updated 5 p.m.

NY1 reports that the victim worked at the IHOP on 14th Street.

Updated 9/2

According to the Post, the victim is Imani Armstrong, who worked beyond her usual shift at IHOP because the restaurant was busy. She was headed to the subway when a masked man approached her from behind and shot her in the back of the head.
 "The individual was targeted," Chief of Department Kenneth Corey said Thursday. "We have a number of suspects that we’re looking at, but nothing we want to commit to right now. But I'm very comfortable saying it was not a random attack."
The Post reported that Armstrong, who also worked as an exotic dancer named "Red," had just been served divorce papers by her wife and moved out of the apartment they shared.
Her kids have been in foster care on Staten Island and she was attending anger management classes in hopes of getting them back, coworkers told the Post. But prior to the murder, she didn't seem "like anything was on her mind," one coworker said.
Updated 9/3

Police have made an arrest in the shooting — Clarkson Wilson, a former boyfriend, CBS 2 reports. 

Tenant concern as longtime family-owned residential buildings sell for $58 million

News arrived last week that Meadow Partners is the new owner of 305 E. 11th St. and 310 E. 12th St. (above), adjacent multifamily residential buildings between First Avenue and Second Avenue. 

The deal for the 89-unit buildings, owned by the Chissick family since the late 1960s, was $58 million. 

Here are some details via the news release
[T]he elevatored buildings are connected by an 11,000 square foot courtyard. Constructed in 1940, the buildings' studios, and one- and two-bedroom units include distinct architectural features with arched doorways and moldings. 

Jeffrey Kaplan, managing partner of Meadow Partners, said, "This off-market transaction is a testament to Meadow’s strong relationships with leading owners and developers throughout New York City and the deep experience we bring to investing in the East Village for the past 13 years. We look forward to modernizing and enhancing the value of these properties in one of Manhattan’s most exciting neighborhoods." 
According to published reports, about a third of the 89 units are rent-stabilized. Kaplan told Crain's, "the market-rate units are renting below market value, but high rents and demand in the city should mean room for growth." 

We've already heard from several residents here. One said, "they are already trying to push people out" with lease non-renewals. 

Per another resident: 
Hearing rumors of 30-50% rent increases and plans to add a 6th floor — therefore letting all 5th-floor leases lapse. There are many long-term, older people and rent-stabilized/rent-controlled tenants, who are naturally concerned." 
With this purchase, Meadow now owns 430 units in the East Village.

Essex Card Shop reopens on TUESDAY

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Signage went up early last evening... announcing the grand reopening of Essex Card Shop at 47 Avenue A this Tuesday, Sept. 6.

The store opens at 10 a.m. ...
... for the first time since a fire destroyed the business this past Jan. 10. 

You can check out our previous posts on Essex Card Shop, located in the retail space of the Ageloff Towers between Third Street and Fourth Street, for more background on what has transpired to date.

The pits: Workers digging in for the future office building at 1 St. Mark's Place

If you've walked by the NE corner of Third Avenue and St. Mark's Place recently, then you've likely noticed that construction has restarted on the future 9-story office building (with retail!) for the lot. 

Workers are digging into the pit ... there's an excavator and Davey drill on site now.

Work had been stopped for nearly 10 months until the developer, Real Estate Equities Corp. (REEC), received a $70-million loan to kickstart the project. REEC plans on 53,000 square feet of office space and some 7,700 square feet for retail.

The building, officially 1 St. Mark's Place, is slated for a summer 2024 completion. Our previous post has more details about what has transpired here to date. 
REEC picked up the 99-year leasehold for the corner properties for nearly $150 million in November 2017. The previous assemblage, which included retail tenants such as Korilla BBQ, the Continental and McDonald's, was demolished in 2019.

Thanks to Steven for the top photo!

East Village Exotics announces itself on Avenue B

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Signage went up yesterday for East Village Exotics on the SE corner of Avenue B and Fourth Street. 

The owners also run East Village Finest Deli right across B... (and they plan to keep both businesses). 

Aside from the usual smoke-shoppy stuff, there will be some corner-market offerings when EVE opens in the next 1-2 weeks...
The previous tenant here, Your Desire For Food, quietly closed in early 2021 after six months in operation ... in the storefront in one of the most colorful buildings around...

Why Panda Express isn't open yet on 14th and 1st

Photos by Stacie Joy

The incoming Panda Express (first mentioned in January) has seemingly been in a holding pattern here on the SW corner of First Avenue and 14th Street in recent weeks. 

It looks ready to go (mostly!), with workers milling about inside (though not in the photo below) ...
One of those workers told EVG correspondent Stacie Joy yesterday that the quick-serve restaurant was waiting for a license from the city to open. (The worker didn't specify what kind of permit.)

The Chinese restaurant chain launched in California in 1983 ... with more than 2,000 locations today (with a handful around NYC).