Recent Comments
An apartment or building has an occupancy limit, a wedding reception has an occupancy limit, the deck of the Intrepid has an occupancy limit, how does the island of Manhattan NOT have an occupancy limit? Who gives four shits about affordable housing or unaffordable housing, how about we can't have 50 people living in a studio apartment (metaphor)! — Jim Smithers on Pier 40 Rescue Plan Announced
My dog River, a shelter dog, is playing with her Mr. Bill like crazy. Will be back to the store for more. Love what you are doing. — Marilyn Brettschneider on Pop-Up: Shelter Chic
..tilled! — Jim Smithers on Where in Tribeca…?
"the counterfeit vendors treating Lispenard Street like a WeWork office" - hahahahahahahahahaha — trollionaire on Seen & Heard: Counterfeit Vendors Camped Out on Lispenard
After that article, I heard the bookstore was upstairs. I'm going to follow up with my contact at HHC and get back to you. — Luis Vazquez (FiDi Fan Page) on Who’s Onboard at the Seaport District
That Chloe and Isabel quote is one of the scariest things I have ever read. — betty on Seen & Heard: Two Pop-Up Shops
distilled — tribeca on Where in Tribeca…?
Is "disingenuous" the word you're looking for? — Erik Torkells on Where in Tribeca…?
Dis... — Jim Smithers on Where in Tribeca…?
I know, I know, it's one of those places that serves wine and bourbon. — Andrea on Where in Tribeca…?
Don't knock this. At least CB 2 gets to consider affordable something. When has our CB 1 ever negotiated with any developer ever to include affordable units ever? Test to follow. — Jean Grillo on Pier 40 Rescue Plan Announced
I like this story. I like this series. I like this store. — hst on Spotlight: Balloon Saloon
Seriously, is there no occupancy limit for Manhattan? There doesn't seem to be an increase in police, fire, tunnels, bridges, subway, Food Emporiums or Soul Cycles to correlate with the increase in population? What is City Planning for? Just a college course? Talk amongst yourselves... — Jim Smithers on Pier 40 Rescue Plan Announced
"Follow the money" is a rather open-ended idea here, suggesting conspiracy. But I think the answer does have to do with money - not so much who is making it as who stands to lose. What people in law enforcement have told me is that trying to deal effectively with these people is a losing proposition for an underfunded judicial system. Punishing or incarcerating these people would cost taxpayers money. Putting them out of business, as they barely employed now, would simply make them burdens on the state. Therefore leaving things as they are makes the most economic sense. At least they're taking home enough money to pay rent on their oftentimes overpopulated dwellings, and buy food at their oftentimes overpriced local markets, which in turn makes those markets viable enterprises. People who don't make enough to buy actual Louis Vuitton will pay for fake LV, and in doing so will support the underground pipeline for such goods streaming in from China, which subsidizes US debt. People who can't afford to shop at Macy's shop at Walmart and the like, and thereby keep the overground market for cheap goods from China alive. This is America's downward economic spiral at work, and the problem is deeply structural. Cleaning up the street won't have even the tiniest effect on the larger economic environment, of which those street vendors are merely the basically uneradicable symptom. I don't mean to go all Bernie Sanders here but... — David G. Imber on Seen & Heard: Counterfeit Vendors Camped Out on Lispenard
Grocery is a volume business. The profit margins are small, only 1-2%. The problem could be rent, or lack of sales/customers, or both. (Having Whole Foods nearby is a blessing and a curse for them.) — James on The Food Emporium Is in Limbo
DNAinfo's article mentioned a "ground-floor café with outdoor seating"—not sure that works if someone else is sharing the ground floor. — Erik Torkells on Who’s Onboard at the Seaport District
As I understand it, the bookstore will be on the second floor and I don't think it affects whatever ground floor tenant exists. — Luis Vazquez (FiDi Fan Page) on Who’s Onboard at the Seaport District
Actually, The Howard Hughes Corporation doesn't own any of the South Street Seaport. HHC has a long-term lease on parts of the Seaport, but the owner is New York City as administered by the New York City Economic Development Corporation. — Terese Loeb Kreuzer on Who’s Onboard at the Seaport District
It was in their announcement that the bookstore would be at 4 Fulton — fd on Who’s Onboard at the Seaport District
Hard to believe a grocer isn't able to operate profitably in that space; seems everyone I know in the neighborhood is a patron. Is this another rent issue or is A&P's bankruptcy the sole driver? — John on The Food Emporium Is in Limbo
John, you're on the money...good analysis! — John on Update: Who’s Onboard at the World Trade Center Mall
This has been going in since the 80's. They get swept up, fined a few hundred bucks, then back to business. It's more agressive now. Follow the money.... — Dixie on Seen & Heard: Counterfeit Vendors Camped Out on Lispenard
Other takes on developer Ben Shaoul: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/08/nyregion/ben-shaoul-takes-the-village.html http://www.thelodownny.com/leslog/2012/08/city-orders-ben-shaoul-to-present-staircase-removal-plan-for-approval.html — James on In the News: Pier 26 Meeting Recap
Yes, they have lots of money and all kinds of donors for various elections to pay off. — Ariane on In the News: Pier 26 Meeting Recap
I wouldn't get too excited over this list. I was told this largely reflects Westfield's "wish list" of retailers it would like to have there (and those it has approached about renting space). Many, and perhaps most, will never end up there. Lacoste's owner (PVH) is closing many of their standalone stores aside from Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein, and I highly doubt Lacoste will show up. The rumor mill is abuzz that Jones the Grocer backed out a while ago and was asked to keep quiet about it (also, there is nothing on its website indicating a NY store will be opening at any time). I doubt there will be much overlap between the retailers already in Brookfield Place, and I also doubt Westfield will end up with as many watch stores as indicated above. Sadly, I would expect that the usual suspects will all end up there: Duane Reade, Banana Republic, L'Occitane, Pret a Manger, Sephora, etc. And any retail establishments could share the fate of the original tenants in the World Financial Center: the hype died quickly and it became a retail ghost town (especially on weekends when most retailers make most of their money). New Yorkers just don't like shopping in malls, especially those underground. But hope springs eternal. — Frank on Update: Who’s Onboard at the World Trade Center Mall







