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The Grey Dog Closing Its Flagship West Village Shop

2011_10_carm20.jpg The Grey Dog coffeeshop has been a neighborhood fixture in its Carmine Street location since it first opened in 1996. But because of a landlord dispute, the flagship West Village shop will be forced to close tomorrow. "The journey that began in 1996 has taken us down a road that no one could have ever envisioned or predicted. I believe that our lives started the day that Grey Dog opened. We grew up in this space," the store's owners, brothers David Ethan and Peter Adrian, wrote on their website.

The brothers are closing the shop not because of a lack of popularity, but rather because they have been locked in a rent dispute with their landlord for the last seven years. The landlord, Janusz Sendowski of Sarsen Realty, “claimed he had made an oversight on our lease and informed us he was intending to collect property taxes retroactive to the beginning of the term. This fee was not included in the lease and amounted to over $100,000,” the brothers wrote on the website.

A new Grey Dog is opening up on Mulberry Street near Chinatown on Friday October 21st. They add that you can come "pay your respects" for the Carmine Street store on Wednesday October 19th at 6 p.m. Regulars told Our Town Downtown that it won't be the same: “There really isn’t any other place like it in the neighborhood,” said community member Dar Wallace. “While I do like to think that I will walk to the new location, that’s probably not going to happen very often.”

We spoke to co-owner David Ethan a few years ago, and he told us what he thought made Grey Dog standout among Manhattan's many cafes and coffeeshops as "one of the few truly bohemian places left in New York City:"

I describe it as a less complicated American café. We have a manual dumbwaiter to bring up the food. We don’t use computers. In order to get the food into the kitchen we have a hole in the floor that we lower it into. We call out people’s names. when their food is ready. We’re not high tech. The food’s real simple but it tastes like mom just baked your bread; you’ve got the smell of bacon and coffee. It’s a simple, small town Americana.
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Comments [rss]

  • bawlsdeep

    That sucks. Grey Dog on Carmine was had kind of a hippy thing going for it, but in a great and non-militant way. Great food and vibe, and some smoking hot Deadhead ladies to boot. RIP.

  • PicoPhreako69

    ;_;

  • virgilstarkwell

    Did they not wonder why they were paying taxes on their other two locations? As much as I love Grey Dog, my hunch is that they were enjoying the benefits of this oversight and are playing dumb now that the honeymoon is over.

    Also, as much as it sucks, they rake in enough in a week in their other joints to cover the bill. These places are a gold mine.

  • novus1

    This dispute has been going on for about the same length of time that they have had multiple locations... it started around the time that they opened the location on University near Union Square.  However, that was still only maybe 4 or 5 years ago, and the Carmine location has been there since 1996, so for ~10 years they would have had no basis for comparison.

    It's not that the landlord is demanding that they correct the oversight in a new lease, it's that he is demanding they pay him retroactively for something that they are not contacted for.  It was HIS oversight, after all.  

  • Dirk

    That's too bad. I love the Grey Dog.

    The landlord's got some balls demanding over $100 K.

  • LazyNanny

    What a shame, that was the last reasonably priced place in that neighborhood. Make room for another overpriced celebrity chef craphole! 

  • Len_Drexler

    I don't know if I would call it "Bohemian" but I rather liked Grey Dog. At least they will have a new location.

  • longacre

    They already have two other locations on University Pl (not too far from Carmine St) and on 16th.

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