That little block of mom and pops, on 9th Avenue between 17th and 18th Streets, is being gutted.
Reader Brad sends in a couple of photos and writes, "They have removed all signage and even kicked the Subway out to create one massive vacant space ripe for a bank and a Duane Reade!"
We've been following this story since it began back in 2008. Here's a quick timeline (for more detail, click here):
2008: Morris Moinian buys the building and prepares to remove all the small businesses, which included Tamara dry cleaning and tailor shop, The New Chelsea Barber shop, a couple of bodegas, Chelsea Liquors, and the Sweet Banana Candy store.
Weeks after that announcement, the community held a rally to save the businesses from eviction.
Months later, Chelsea Liquors was gone after 30 years in business, and the bodegas began to fall.
Then it got quiet.
2008
2012: Moinian sold the building to the Stonehenge Group, who promptly delivered eviction notices to all of the small business tenants that remained.
The New China take-out joint shuttered. The New Barber Shop shuttered. The tailor shop and Sweet Banana vanished. Places that mattered deeply to people, that helped connect them to each other and gave them safe places to land, were removed from their neighborhood.
The Stonehenge Group released a rendering of their vision, beige and bland, an image that belongs to the new city, the vanished city.
Look closer at what was lost:
Death of a Block
Death of a Block 2
Death of a Block 3
Saving 9th Avenue
Sweet Banana Candy Store
New Barber Shop
Chelsea Liquors
New China
Cool! When complete, this neighborhood will be totally awesome for 'bots, 'droids, zombies and those cool folks from outside NY who want the to live here for the city vibe but need all the familiar scenery of whereever they wanted to get away from.
ReplyDeleteI was shocked to see this block-long plywood construction fence the other day. It looks like a giant casket
ReplyDeleteIt's supposedly going to be another CVS. Yippee.
ReplyDeleteNYC is adopting the geography of nowhere.
ReplyDeletemanhattan becomes more and more like a rest area on the interstate, one brand and all shite.
ReplyDeleteBreaks my heart
ReplyDeletedon't robots have to eat?
ReplyDelete