Bleecker Street: From boho to high fashion
Bleecker Street (Photo/NYNewsday.com)
Destination: Bleecker Street.
The name carries mythic weight in New York City's
Greenwich Village, calling up images of beat writers
huddled in smoke-filled cafes and guitar-slung folkies
wailing songs of protest. In its artistic heyday
back when rents were cheaper than most Con Edison
bills a great many of New York's cultural heroes
prowled around Bleecker Street, among them Bob Dylan,
Allen Ginsberg and Diane Arbus.
The meandering cross-town thoroughfare once a humble
cow path has over the years morphed from folk haven
to gay rights springboard to antiques nook. In its
latest reincarnation, Bleecker has become a highway of
high fashion. These days, pedestrians strolling down its
tree-shaded twists and bends are most likely toting
shiny, carry-bags with embossed logos and silken rope
handles, not protest boards or poetry books.
The designer makeover swept the street fast. Bleecker
enjoyed a couple of cameos on HBO's "Sex and the
City," Miranda scored a date dishing about John
Adams at the Biography bookstore, and she and Carrie
dissected relationships over cupcakes at the Magnolia
Bakery and the masses appeared overnight.
Lewis Manalo, 27, worked as a clerk at the bookstore
while he was a student at NYU. Manalo left New York
after graduating in 2001 and moved back to Brooklyn
this past January, resuming his post at the store.
"When I first came back, I thought I was lost. It had
changed that much," he said.
Bleecker Street stretches from the East Village all
the way to Eighth Avenue, but the allure for most
shoppers lies west of Seventh Avenue, where Bleecker
cuts across the maze of West Village side streets, and
each block brings a new wave of designer store fronts.
Marc by Marc Jacobs opened on the corner of Bleecker
and West 11th Street in 2000, and was the first
upscale label to arrive on what was then a string of
blocks clotted with antiques stores.
Before long, Cynthia Rowley moved in between Charles
and Perry streets with her flirty, frothy frocks and
spindly t-strap heels. Lulu Guinness opened shop next
door, lining shelves with her signature, patterned
totes and smart city girl pumps. Ralph Lauren has
taken residence on both sides of Bleecker, and Marc
has since opened a second store.
Some neighborhood retailers mourn Bleecker's new
designer duds, which they say brought the usual
drawback of gentrification: rising rents that force
out the old-timers.
"It has definitely gone more upscale in recent years,
and some of the smaller family owned places have
closed up," said Anne Marie Romanczyk, owner of
children's clothier City Cricket. The store opened at
West 10th just off Bleecker about five years ago, but
Romanczyk has lived in the neighborhood since 1987.
City Cricket follows a newer trend in fashion:
high-end kids clothes, including a selection of $160
sweaters, white cotton kimono pajamas imported from
Japan, and tot-sized vintage Levis priced at $98.
Though some small shops have suffered from the
invasion of big name neighbors, the increased street
traffic has allowed several specialty shops selling
hand-crafted, vintage or imported merchandise to
thrive.
Best bets at newcomer Lori McLean, located on Grove
Street just off Bleecker, are a line of delicate charm
necklaces and a collection of funky felt bracelets
that look like rings of rainbow jawbreakers.
Just down the street, the racks at Beautiful Tibet are
bursting with vibrant silk tunics imported from India
and Nepal. Jeweler Satya offers spiritual creations
inspired by symbols found in yoga and meditation.
Prayer beads and flat, buffed silver pendants
imprinted with lotus flowers and trees of life dot the
display cases.
Even with its new look, "Bleecker Street is the heart
of the Village," said Romanczyk, and she accepts
cyclical facelifts as one of New York's essential
traits. The city doesn't sleep because it's way too
busy rebuilding.
"Change is good," she said. "That's the nature of New
York. It can always absorb that change."
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