New York Songlines: Houston Street

Washington St | Greenwich St | Hudson | Varick | Bedford | 6th Ave
Macdougal | Sullivan | Thompson | LaGuardia | Greene | Wooster | Mercer | Broadway
Crosby | Lafayette | Mulberry | Mott | Elizabeth | Bowery
Chrystie/2nd Ave | Forsyth | Eldridge | Allen/1st Ave | Orchard | Ludlow
Essex/Avenue A | Norfolk | Suffolk | Clinton/Avenue B | Attorney | Ridge | Pitt/Avenue C | Columbia/Avenue D | Baruch | FDR Drive

Pronounced HOW-ston, not HYOO-ston, because that's apparently the way the guy it's named for, William Houstoun, pronounced his name. Houstoun, a lawyer, was a delegate from Georgia to both the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention. So how does that get him a street named after him in New York City? It doesn't--the street is named for him because he married Mary Bayard, whose father Nicholas Bayard was the landowner who first cut this street through his own estate. The east end of the street was originally called North Street.

The street was badly damaged by an ill-advised widening project in the 1920s--removing whole rows of houses and leaving big blank walls exposed along much of its length--hence the abundance of building-side advertising.








S <===             WASHINGTON STREET             ===> N

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S <===             GREENWICH STREET             ===> N

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Corner (375 Hudson): Saatchi & Saatchi advertising agency; this building contains some of the extensive Saatchi art collection.

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Block (395 Hudson): Home to Hot 97, the hip-hop radio station whose studios have become a traditional site for inter-artist rivalries to escalate into violence. In February 2001, a feud between Lil' Kim's posse and Foxy Brown's Capone-N-Noreaga crew broke into gunfire, resulting in one injury and a perjury conviction for Lil' Kim. The 50 Cent/The Game beef turned into a shooting here in February 2005. And rapper Jamal "Gravy" Woolard took a bullet here in April 2006--though it didn't prevent him from giving a previously scheduled on-air interview.


S <===             HUDSON STREET             ===> N

South:

Block (201 Varick): Designed by Albert Buchman and Eli Jacques Kahn, this was built in 1929 as the United States Appraisers' Stores Building, a federal building that warehoused goods seized by the Customs Bureau. During World War II, the building was reportedly used for secret atomic experiments. The Atomic Energy Commission moved offices to the building in 1959.

The building houses an INS detention center, used to hold what would be called "political prisoners" if they were in another country. After September 11, it is believed to have held numerous "special guests"--though the point of a secret jail like this one is that one doesn't know who or how many. As commentator John Bloom wrote, "I've seen buildings like this in other countries--in Moscow, in Istanbul, in Mexico City--but I had never before seen an unmarked urban detention center in the U.S."

Also in the building is the Environmental Measurements Laboratory, which is the government's main radiation-testing lab. It helped monitor the environmental consequences of September 11. It's now part of the Department of Homeland Security.

Other offices in the building include Manhattan's main passport office, a branch of the National Archives and the local office of Rep. Jerry Nadler.

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250: Manhattan Occupational Training Center, special education, ages 14-21






























S <===           VARICK STREET           ===> N

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Corner (200 Varrick): S.O.B.'s; nightclub featuring Sounds of Brazil (and many other parts of the world, particularly Africa and Latin America).

Film Forum

209: Calls itself "the only autonomous nonprofit cinema in New York City"; a leading venue for alternative and classic movies.

195: Gilda's Club; support center for cancer patients named for comedian Gilda Radner.







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226: Alphaville; vintage toys and other pop culture collectibles

220: Was 220 Club, noted gay/transgender club of the early 1970s; later Bar Cichetti.

196: The last address of Grove Press, a counter-cultural publisher that fought censorship by publishing Lady Chatterly's Lover.


BEDFORD ST         ===> N






S <===           6TH AVENUE           ===> N

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Corner (51 Macdougal): Something Special, a coffeeshop and mail drop used by numerous nearby notables, including Patti Smith, the Beastie Boys, Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker (who also used to work here). The building to the north, demolished for the widening of Houston Street, is said to have housed a bar that was part of Joseph Kennedy's rumrunning business.

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William F. Passannante Playground

Named for a speaker pro tem of the New York State Assembly, a lifelong Villager and a booster of the neighborhood.









S <===       MACDOUGAL STREET       ===> N

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146 (corner): De Marco's pizzeria; in March 2007, employee Alfredo Romero Morales was shot and killed here by David Garvin, a troubled ex-Marine and crime reporter, who went on to kill two auxilliary cops before being gunned down. The space was formerly Nellie's, a tony lounge, and before that Aggie's, a nice breakfast spot.

144: Raffetto's, old-school pasta-maker, has been at this location since 1906.

142: Mr Sushi, affordable

136: Tibet on Houston

134: El Paso, affordable lobster; until 1966 was Kiwi, described by New York Unexpurgated as the "evilest bar in Village."

132: La Quinze, bistro named for a French rugby team.


S <===             SULLIVAN STREET             ===> N

South:

St Anthony of Padua

Corner (155 Sullivan): Catholic church built c. 1888. It's said that the Italians of the South Village, seeing how the Irish of the Lower East Side had honored St. Patrick with a cathedral, wanted to honor one of their own countrymen with an equally nice church (though Anthony was originally from Portugal). Anthony is the saint invoked against fires, and some believe he's helped the Village have less than its share.


Corner (151 Thompson): St Anthony's Pious League; dates to c. 1880.

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128: XR Bar, Cajun club with live music, is in this 1895 tenement; NL, Manhattan's only Dutch restaurant, is on the Sullivan side.

114: Pageant Book and Print Shop










S <===             THOMPSON STREET             ===> N

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106 (corner): Arturo's Pizzeria, long-running pizza joint

100: Jane, American

94: Madame X, bordello-themed bar/jazz club. Good date spot.

92: Yama, acclaimed sushi mini-chain

90: Zinc Bar, notable venue for Afro-Latin music; Zamir Furs has a sidelight making furs for Barbie.

Corner (490 LaGuardia): Silver Spurs, Western-themed burger joint.


S <===                 W BROADWAY / LA GUARDIA PL                 ===> N

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Corner (475 W Broadway): Dos Caminos was Nello, the SoHo branch of a pricey Upper East Side Northern Italian, and before that Amici Miei, noted for its stylized horse sculpture.




S <===         WOOSTER ST







S <===         GREENE ST







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Time Landscape

Garden is supposed to represent pre-contact vegetation; it's not particularly convincing to me.

76: Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollack lived at this no-longer-existing address in the mid-1930s.

University Village

Designed by modernist architect I.M. Pei in 1966. Two are owned by NYU, the other a co-op. Check out Bust of Sylvette in center of complex, monumental cubist Picasso sculpture (1970). Most cities would make a bigger deal out of having a colossal Picasso.

NYU Coles Sports Center









Mercer-Houston Dog Run Association

Private dog park.


S <===             MERCER STREET             ===> N

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Corner: This building's north wall featured a 1972 art installation called The Wall, by Forrest Myers, consisting of blue girders arranged in a grid. The owner of the building had it removed in 2003 so that he could sell the wall as ad space, but after a long legal struggle it was replaced in 2007-- spiffed up and moved up somewhat so an ad can fit underneath.

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Cable Building

18: Angelika Film Center, popular art house cinema, is on the ground floor of a building designed in 1894 by Stanford White for the Broadway Cable Traction Co., cable car operators. Theaters are in basement, where machines once pulled cable cars from as far away as 36th Street.

Before the Cable Building, this was the site of St Thomas Church, built 1824. John Jacob Astor was put to rest in the Astor family crypt here in 1848; Washington Irving was an honorary pallbearer. Astor was relocated in 1851 to Trinity Church Cemetery at 155th Street. The congregation moved to 5th Avenue and West 53rd in 1866.


S <===           BROADWAY           ===> N

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11: Now a parking lot, this address was once the site of The National, the top venue in Yiddish theater.

The mob boss in the book The Pope of Greenwich Village crawls to this corner after being poisoned at his Mulberry Street social club. That's quite a crawl.







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Corner: The former site of "Whale of a Wash," a car wash that mostly served taxis. It had the one billboard on Houston that I actually liked.

BROADWAY/LAFAYETTE STATION: B/D/F/Q trains to West 4th
F train to 2nd Avenue
B/D/Q trains to Grand Street

In the 1980s, as many as 200 people were living in the subway tunnels between this and the 2nd Avenue station.


          CROSBY STREET          

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Block: Gaseteria station, a local brand now almost extinct, was replaced by a high-tech BP Connect.









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22-32: Around here was the location of Harry Hill's Concert Saloon, a low-life dive that kept the peace so effectively that it became a magnet for slumming tourists.






Corner (318 Lafayette): Win Restaurant Supply


S <===           LAFAYETTE STREET           ===> N

South:

Puck Building

Block (295 Lafayette): This Romanesque Revival landmark was built between 1885-1893, with additional construction in 1899 to replace part of the building that was torn down to make room for the extension of Lafayette Street. (The northeast corner is the original entrance.) The building housed the offices and printing plant of the Puck humor magazine, which was published until 1918. (William Randolph Hearst bought it in 1917 and closed it a year later.) Years later, the offices of Spy magazine were here. Billy Crystal proposes here in When Harry Met Sally.... Grace works here on Will and Grace.

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Corner: Here was the godawful Yahoo sign, an embarrassing symbol of the dot.com mania. It was replaced by a giant handheld videogame, forcing at least one Songlines reader to "endure movie ads and Playstation demos 24/7."










S <===             MULBERRY STREET             ===> N

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41: A new condo with a wavy brick pattern going up here. Formerly Houston Village Farm, built on the site of Horn and Hardart, maker of Automats.

There was an outdoor exhibit here on the magazine Puck, photojournalist Jacob Riis and inventor Nikola Tesla--all neighborhood figures.

47: Botanica, slightly New Age bar, and the cheese-featuring Nolita House were the Knitting Factory music club, and earlier an actual knitting factory.

49: The Print Shop now houses Time's Up, radical environmentalist bikers.

51: Milano's, skinny, atmospheric bar

55: Emilio's Ballato. ''If Little Italy had good restaurants, they'd be like this''--Voice.

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46-48: The site of Nikola Tesla's lab from 1895-99.

56 (corner): Soho Billiards. Clearly this is in no way South of Houston. It's not even across the street from Soho--that's Nolita over there.


S <===           MOTT STREET           ===> N

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Corner (301 Elizabeth): Soho Court, apartment building that is not in Soho. Has a strange rock fountain that can be seen from the street, though.


          ELIZABETH STREET          

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73 (corner): Cafe Colonial, Brazilian

75: New York Bars and Backbars, restaurant equipment, including vintage Automats.







Corner: Adams Co. Restaurant Equipment Supply

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76: Lot 76 NYC, aka Manhattan Castles and Props; outdoor antique store selling vintage signs, statuary, ceramic fixtures etc.








Corner (294 Bowery): Chef Restaurant Supply Co.


S <===           THE BOWERY           ===> N

In the early 19th Century, there was a pro-pig riot on Houston just east of the Bowery, when workers trying to enforce an ordinance against letting pigs wander the street were beaten and their rounded-up pigs liberated.

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Chrystie Place, a residential development that will also provide space for the Chinatown YMCA and a University Settlement community office.














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Liz Christy Gardens

One of the first community gardens-- founded in 1973 by a leader of the the Green Guerrillas. A beautiful oasis. A reader notes: ''The garden includes a rare Dawn Redwood and a Blue Atlas Cedar drapes its branches over a turtle pond. Open Saturday afternoon year-round, Tuesday evening and Thursday afternoon in summer, and other times when any of the volunteer gardeners are there.''

This is said to have been the southeast corner of Peter Stuyvesant's farm ("bouwerie" in Dutch).

2ND AVENUE STATION: F trains to Broadway/Lafayette
F train to Delancey Street


S <===           CHRYSTIE ST / 2ND AVE           ===> N

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Sara D. Roosevelt Park

In 1929, the Walker admistration destroyed seven blocks of decaying tenements; they were supposed to be replaced by model apartments, but corruption got in the way. In 1934 they were turned instead into this strip park, named for FDR's mother.


S <===         FORSYTH ST

135 (corner): Howard Johnson Express; affordable if generic place to sleep on the Lower East Side.

Yonah Shimmel's Knishes Bakery

137: Hasn't changed much since 1910, when it was opened by its namesake, a Bulgarian rabbi who needed extra money.

Sunshine Theater

143: Originally a Dutch Reformed church that became a German Evangelical Mission church in 1844. In 1908 it was turned into the Houston Athletic Club, a prizefight arena, which in 1909 became the Houston Hippodrome, a Yiddish theater and nickolodeon. Open as the Sunshine cinema from 1917 to c. 1945. Served for decades as a warehouse for a hardware store before reopening as a plush art house. Time Out NY compared all the theaters in New York and found this one to be the best.

145: White Rabbit, an Asian/Spanish tapas bar with a white-heavy color scheme. Was Idlewild, airport-themed bar; before that Den of Thieves.

147: Dopey Benny's features variations on the cheese steak theme. Named for Dopey Benny Fein, an early 20th Century Jewish mob boss.


        ELDRIDGE ST

Corner: Was a Discount Pet Shop that also sold bait.

153: Taste Good Noodle Manufacturing Corp.

159: Was Carnaval, Brazilian-themed lounge

161: Oliva, Spanish bistro; formerly Mojo's Pub

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Corner: Vacant lot was the building of Irreplaceable Artifacts, an architectural salvage company whose building collapsed during illegal renovations on July 13, 2000. The fire department punitively demolished what was left. The company seems to be carrying on, with a stock of outdoor sculpture on display here.













































First Park

Corner: Sliver of playground created in 1935 from land left over from widening Houston. Renovated in 1997.


S <===           ALLEN STREET / 1ST AVE           ===> N

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173 (corner): Economy Foam & Futon Center

177: Burkina Hip-Hop Shop

179: Russ & Daughters Appetizers; classic delicacy store opened in 1914; now run by the grandson of one of the daughters.


S <===         ORCHARD ST

South:

187 (corner): Bereket, terrific Turkish takeout

189: Cafe Cairo

191: Pomme Pomme; Belgian fries

193: Teiz Grocery

195: Famous Original Ray's Pizza; not the original, but it has its partisanse--in business since 1964.

201: Yoshi Japanese Restaurant

203: Hot Bagels; 24-hour

Katz's Delicatessen

205: A Lower East Side institution since 1888, with the Katz name since 1912. During World War II, it urged customers to "Send a Salami to Your Boy in the Army." Visited by presidents seeking ethnic votes from Carter to Clinton. Vice President Al Gore had lunch here with Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin. Location of When Harry Met Sally’s famous deli scene; Johnny Depp meets his FBI contact here in Donnie Brasco. They Might Be Giants' "New York City" sings of "Statue of Liberty, Staten Island Ferry, Co-op City, Katz's and Tiffany's."


S <===         LUDLOW ST

Mercury Lounge

217: An intimate music venue; originally was servant's quarters for the Astor mansion, later Garfein's Restaurant, and from 1933 to 1993 a tombstone workshop--a leftover monument is now part of the bar. They Might Be Giants have played here more than anywhere else.

225: Element, a dance club. Was Manhattan Gentlemen's Club, a strip club; a goth nightclub known as Chaos and The Bank; and artist Jasper John’s home and art vault. Originally the Provident Loan Society, whose name can still be seen on the building.

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Peretz Square

Named in 1952 for Isaac Loeb Peretz (1851-1915), a Jewish Pole who has been called the father of modern Jewish literature.




























































                                                            EAST 1ST STREET           ===> W

S <===             ESSEX STREET / AVENUE A             ===> N

South:

ABC Playground






        NORFOLK ST

245: Formerly Never, then Lunar Blue

247: Abaya, chi-chi bar

253: Was El Mirage, underground club.

257: In 1939, was the restaurant Little Hungary.


        SUFFOLK ST

Meow Mix

269 (corner): Was Manhattan's coolest lesbian club; took over a bar called The Far Side in 1994. Sleater-Kinney played here; Chasing Amy has a scene here.

293 (corner): Clinton Restaurant, Spanish diner

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Corner: Houston Deli Grocery

244: Formerly Spiral

Red Square

250: Luxury apartments named in 1989, during a wave of Soviet nostalgia. Note the statue of Lenin on the roof and mixed-up numbers on the clock.























S <===           CLINTON STREET / AVENUE B           ===> N

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S <===         ATTORNEY ST






S <===         RIDGE ST





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S <===             PITT STREET / AVENUE C             ===> N

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Hamilton Fish Park

Named for the New York governor who served as U.S. Secretary of State under Grant.

Hamilton Fish Branch

415: This branch of the New York Public Library is in a 1961 building, replacing a 1909 Carnegie-funded library that was demolished when Houston was widened. The namesake was a descendant of Peter Stuyvesant who was a New York governor and President Grant's secretary of state.

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Gustave Hartman Square

Hartman was a judge and a Jewish community leader who founded the Israel Orphan Asylum.

At No. 376 on this stretch of Houston was the Rabbi Solomon Kluger School, a yeshiva and synagogue designed by H.I. Feldman in 1924. Apparently demolished during the widening of Houston.





                                    EAST 2ND STREET             ===> W

S <===             COLUMBIA STREET / AVENUE D             ===> N

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437: Site of Engine Co. No. 11 (founded 1865; disbanded 1957)

525: Mangin School

Joseph Mangin was a city surveyor who helped design the present City Hall in 1802.









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Lillian Wald Houses

442: PS 196/Island School

This elementary school was formerly PS 188, where future New York State Attorney General Louis J. Lefkowitz and Jerome Weidman, author of I Can get If For You Wholesale, went to school.









                        FDR DRIVE                        

East River Park








EAST RIVER






Is your favorite Houston Street spot missing? Write to Jim Naureckas and tell him about it.

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