Posts

Showing posts from July, 2014

More at 12th and University

Image
The last business to remain open in the former Bowlmor building on 12th and University has closed, leaving no more. University Pita has shuttered. In their goodbye note, they say they are not relocating. Around the corner, similarly displaced Japonica is relocating. Their plywood is up with a "coming soon" banner. Meanwhile, back at Bowlmor, flowers have appeared in the shuttered gate, along with a note, "In loving memory of Marky B." Mark Braunreuther was Bowlmor's greeter for 16 years. In the Times recently, Jo Certo wrote a memorial goodbye to him , calling him a "benevolent minder, gentleman greeter, peacekeeper on the rowdy corner" and "the mayor of University Place." Now that every single one of the many small businesses in this building have been pushed out--from Bowlmor to Stromboli Pizza--the luxury condo construction can begin. Already, the hardhats are revving their engines. Previously: Bowlmor Universit

Chat 'N Chew

Image
As neighborhood-changing high-end restaurants are shuttering due to high rents that they themselves helped to elevate, the trendy little places that followed in their wake will inevitably follow in their demise. In 1994, the trailer-park, white-trash, small-town theme restaurant Chat 'N Chew opened right across E. 16th street from Union Square Cafe, which opened in 1985. Union Square Cafe is shuttering--and it looks like Chat 'N Chew is already down for the count . Reader Ben writes in, "They closed down for 'renovations' a year or two ago and re-opened with an updated menu and look. Some of the old comfort food was still on the menu but much had been replaced with more upscale, trendy items. They were trying for a new and different crowd. It didn't work. I guess Sunday was the last day because Monday the paper went up on the windows. There is no sign or any indication that the space will re-open or if it's becoming something else." The res

From Vinyl to Dunkin'

Image
Recently we saw the former Bleecker St. Records turn into a Starbucks . This week, the former Norman's Sound and Vision record shop has become a Dunkin' Donuts. Monday was their grand opening . Located on Third Avenue between 7th and St. Mark's, Norman's closed in 2012 . The rent was too damn high. " The landlords pushed us out here ," said the owner in a video interview, referring to Williamsburg, where Norman's has since moved. According to the Center for an Urban Future's 2013 " State of the Chains " report, Dunkin Donuts is New York's most plentiful: "For the sixth consecutive year, Dunkin Donuts tops our list as the largest national retailer in New York City, with a total of 515 stores. Over the past year, Dunkin Donuts had a net increase of 39 stores in the city (an 8 percent gain)." Add one more to the growing pile.

Lunch at El Quijote

Image
Starting this week, I'm trying my hand at a weekly column over at Metro NY on any and all things New York City. For my first essay, it's lunchtime at El Quijote. Read the piece at Metro here Lunchtime at El Quijote is a quiet affair. Classical music plays overhead, a series of waltzes, giving you space to hear yourself think. Patrons are gray-haired, hushed, some of them in singles, sitting with white napkins on their laps, not reading, just sitting. No one, not even once, takes out a cell phone. They sit without anxiety, self-contained. The waiter, dressed in his admiral's jacket, glides silently among the tables, bearing platters of meat and fish, cocktails, and salads. Bread arrives in a wire basket adorned with a paper doily. At the far end of the dining room, mounted on a wall painted with sky, a group of windmills slowly turn. The dreary ceiling, scalloped in stucco, brazenly shows its age, untroubled by the dark spots and cracks. Dim chandeliers hang by

Rodeo Bar

Image
VANISHED By now, most of you know that Rodeo Bar was closing. It shuttered yesterday, after nearly 30 years on 3rd Avenue. In a farewell profile to the popular honky-tonk, the Times writes today that the closure came "after 27 years of holding out, Alamo style, against rising rents and marching chain stores." I had never heard of Rodeo Bar until some readers wrote in, weeks ago, to tell me about the closure. I'm really not the Urban Cowboy type. Recently, I went for the first time, for lunch, which is probably not exactly prime-time to go. It was quiet. I had a burger. While a western-style bar is not the sort of place I generally frequent, Rodeo was a survivor, a long-lasting small business standing since 1987 against the corporatization of the city, and that's something. It is yet another casualty of New York's massive, homogenizing shift. From the Times : "The owner, Mitch Pollak, said changes in the neighborhood had made him decide t

Ding Dong Lounge

Image
VANISHING The Ding Dong Lounge , a 21st-century dive bar up by Columbia, is closing. Ding Dong DJ Linda Rizzo writes in: " The Ding has lost its lease. Victim to landlord greed, avarice, and douchebaggery. The Ding Dong Lounge at 929 Columbus Avenue will close its doors (hopefully only until a new location is found) on Thursday, July 31 . It was a real pioneer being a rock & roll dive bar/music venue above 14th Street, and one with nary a television." photo: Linda Rizzo Opened by Bill Nolan, former owner of Motor City Bar (also just vanished ), the Ding Dong got started in 2001, so not a very long time ago, but it gained a reputation. Gothamist called it "dirty in all the right places," a "blissfully local" "cheap dive with oodles of personality that is almost never filled (and certainly never with Columbia kids)." The Village Voice named it the Best Cheap Manhattan Dive New York 2013 . They described it: "There is not a

El Paso Restaurant

Image
VANISHED Reader Carol Gardens lets us know that the old El Paso restaurant on West Houston Street has closed. The place has been emptied and abandoned, with no explanation of when or why. The phone number has been disconnected and the website is gone. A Yelper wrote on July 11: "Went there tonight and it's closed and it looks like for good. Menu is down. Metal grates over door and windows. RIP." El Paso served Mexican-Spanish cuisine here since--well, I don't know since when. Possibly the 1960s. Maybe the 1980s. They had a big anniversary recently, with reduced prices, and I meant to go back but never did. Now I'm kicking myself. They specialized in a cheap lobster dinner.

From Vinyl to Starbucks

Image
The Starbucks that took the place of Bleecker Street Records has got its signage up, sans Mermaid, according to Richard Morgan who shared this shot: Luckily, the record shop successfully relocated to 188 West 4th Street , along with their big kitties, Skuzzball and Creeper. But still. They lost their last spot after 20 years when the landlord jacked up the rent to $27,000 a month. Village Voice At the time, on 1010 WINS , Chris Simunek (of High Times ) predicted, “what’s going to go in there is a Starbucks or something, or just something that we already have plenty of.” I thought it would be a frozen yogurt or candy shop, but Mr. Simunek wins the prize. This is the city's 9,000,000,000th Starbucks location. 

The Last Days of the Last Kim's

Image
As you may already know, Kim's Video & Music on First Avenue is not long for this world. They've just increased their goodbye discount with a 50% off "Everything Must Go" sale. I was told they expect to close either by the end of July or the middle of August.  As for reopening elsewhere, I was informed (in typical Kim's style): "The sign says Closing Sale. If we were relocating, it would say Relocating Sale." So, no. This is the last location of the once great Kim's mini-empire. Originally on Avenue A, opened in 1987 in Yongman Kim's dry cleaners, it expanded to multiple locations, including two on St. Mark's Place, two on Bleecker, and one uptown. The 21st century has not been kind to Kim's. The Avenue A location, known as the "mean" one, shuttered in 2004 . Kim's Underground on Bleecker is now a Duane Reade . In 2008, Kim's Mediapolis uptown closed , thanks to a rent hike from Columbia University and the po

Roxy Luncheonette

Image
VANISHED In 2012, I checked in with the Roxy Luncheonette , a little swivel stool and counter place down on John Street that had survived since 1944 . Now, in its 70th year, the Roxy has shuttered. Roxy egg cream, 2009 Reader Frank writes in with the sad news and recent photos: "At some point in the last 18 months or so, the owner sold it to new operators. They modified the name, calling it Roxy's East West Diner. It was basically the same--still a diner--but not quite as good." "Worse," Frank adds, " the ongoing, hellish construction on John Street kept the Roxy (and its neighbors) hidden under a sidewalk bridge . Tragically and ironically, workers carted off the sidewalk bridge last week--just in time for the Roxy to close." Roxy today In 2012, a reporter asked the Roxy's long-time owner how long he thought he'd be able to stay open with all the construction outside. "Couple more months," said the owner. "

St. Mark's Bookshop: Open

Image
This weekend, the new St. Mark's Bookshop opened for business on East 3rd Street between 1st and A. They opened for a few hours on Saturday, then went full-time yesterday, noon - 10pm. Traffic flowed steadily in and out of the shop, and people were buying books. The new space is smaller than the one on Astor Place, yet roomier, with white undulating shelves that curve around the perimeter in "a continuous series of horizontal bands which allow the eye to glide around the space without visual friction." Book subjects are carved into the wood. In the center of the shop is an assortment of stacked roll-away tables. The design is meant to better accommodate readings and other events. The rear part of the shop bends to the right into an alcove-like space. You can take a look at the design here . I will miss the old space, its many sections and its spaciousness, along with the vestibule filled with fascinating local announcements . I'll miss the big, enticing w

Clover Barber Shop Sale

Image
For many years, Park Slope's Clover Barber Shop was a lovely spot for a haircut. It shuttered in 2008 and its proprietor, Mr. Riccardelli, passed away last year. Earlier this year the shop got a new tenant --a wine store from down the block. I worried about the fate of the sign, but was unaware that the shop had remained untouched and intact behind its shutters. Now we hear from a reader that the contents of the shop are currently on sale. The letters have been removed from the sign and gathered in an old trunk. They're selling for $25 apiece. There are chairs, mirrors, tables, dishes, vases, lamps--the contents not only of the barber shop, but of the entire "1930's tenement," as the sign says. And this might be the best treasure of the bunch--a barber chair for children's haircuts, in the shape of a mid-century automobile. Gorgeous. I hope the barber's things will find good homes. The sale is at 387 7th Avenue and runs through the weeke

Shakespeare & Hipsters & Tourists

Image
Shakespeare and Co. is still open at 716 Broadway, unsure of when the closure will come. Visit them before they're gone--they've got a packed New York table just waiting for you. Meanwhile, the space next door is for rent. The advertising makes it clear: Who is New York for? American and foreign tourists. Who are the "new village people"? Hipsters and business!

Help Punjabi Deli

Image
The Punjabi Deli has been tucked in a corner on 1st Street near 1st Avenue since 1994. Open 24 hours a day, they serve mostly cab drivers, but many locals have also discovered the deli's delicious and inexpensive vegetarian dishes of Indian cuisine. Punjabi offers cabbies a place to rest and refuel, and to socialize and create connections. Sometimes, one of the workers will break into spontaneous song . But business has been declining for Punjabi. Owner Singh told the Lo-Down last year that he "lost half his business over the past few years with less parking available in the area and construction on Houston Street making it harder for taxis to stop at his deli." It used to be you'd see a yellow stripe of taxis lined up in front of Punjabi. Now you see construction materials.   Punjabi is petitioning the city to bring a taxi relief stand to the front of the deli , a place where taxis can park for an hour so drivers can get a meal, use the rest room, an

Snack Dragon

Image
Josephine Jansen, proprietor of the Snack Dragon taco joints, let me know last week that the location on East 3rd Street is closing by the end of July . She writes that the closure is "due to the fact that Croman wants to triple the rent to $3900 for 100sq feet of public space and a tiny basement. Snack Dragon has been serving delicious tacos, great music and eclectic vibes to the EV set for 10 years now. They will not negotiate the lease." A decade is not a very long time, but there's always been something comfortingly offbeat 1990s about Snack Dragon. Jansen once told NYPress , "I’m a diehard East Villager. I like it here; I get mad at people for moving to Brooklyn—the neighborhood is changing cause the people are leaving." I visited Snack Dragon, had some of those delicious tacos, and found myself immediately in an intelligent and entertaining conversation with waiter Conrad Ventur and his friend Timothy Dean Lee . We talked about the demise of th

Alan's New Alley

Image
After being forced to close due to rising rents and changes in technology, Alan's Alley video store has found a new home. When I spoke to Alan in March, he told me he did not think he'd be able to find any place in the city with affordable rent. "It's been a nice 25 years," he said, resigned to closing. But now he writes on Facebook : " Alan's Alley has happily risen from the ashes. A fortuitous turn of events has given us a new lease on life! We will be moving with D.J. to 164 West 25th Street, Suite 5D. We will be accepting calls starting Friday, July 18th. We should be back in business the following weekend of July 26-27." Alan's Alley has been in Chelsea since 1988. This weekend they had a wine and cheese party for their customers, to say goodbye to the old place and to thank the many volunteers who showed up to help Alan pack. Previously: Alan's Alley for rent Alan's Alley closing

Metamorphosis: Meatpacking

Image
Brian Rose's book Metamorphosis: Meatpacking 1985 & 2013 is about to come off the presses. It features incredible photos of the meatpacking district before and after hyper-gentrification. Some of those shots were first featured on this blog in 2013 , and I got the chance to write the foreword for the book . I recommend it to anyone interested in the city's transformation during the Bloomberg years. Brian's photographs will appear in a show at Dillon Gallery, from July 15 - August 15, with an opening and book launch party tomorrow, July 15 . Don't miss it.

El Sombrero Makeover

Image
El Sombrero, aka The Hat, on Ludlow and Stanton is getting a major makeover. After 30 years in business, after struggling in the changed neighborhood , after attempts to save it failed , El Sombrero closed a few months ago. It was supposed to turn into yet another outpost of the Artichoke pizza chain, but that fell through . New owners took over in March, promising the keep the El Sombrero name and the old vibe, with a bit of sprucing up . That has meant a total gut renovation. I recently took a peek inside, where it seems to be that "rustic" wood look. Can white subway tiles and Edison bulbs be far behind? But, oh, there's the old El Sombrero sign, tucked way in the back. Will it be making a return appearance? More importantly, will the margaritas (now in 13 flavors, the new owner told me) still be available in to-go cups? Previously: The Hat on Its Last Legs Mob the Hat