A sad day for old Columbians
May. 21st, 2006 08:10 pmI get my alumni newsletters mostly online now. A sad tale in the latest one:
A beloved Morningside Heights bar, The West End, has closed its doors and will reopen in July as a Cuban restaurant, Havana Central. Renovations will increase the restaurant’s capacity to 150 people. A Columbia University School of Business alumnus, Jeremy Merrin, is overseeing the renovations and promises the new restaurant will retain the same charm (and student-friendly prices!) of The West End.
When I went there, they didn't have student-friendly prices, but they did have reasonably good burgers and fries. It was thought of as the postgrad students' bar. But, it's sad to see it join the pantheon of legendary Columbia U. eating places in the Great Restaurant Strip-Mall in the Sky: Mama Joy's, with imported beer and great sandwiches, Ta-Kome, with the Hoagie Special, on which I chomped my way to mammoth obesity, Chock-Full-O'Nuts on the corner of 116th and Broadway with that "Heavenly Coffee" and the date-nut bread, Moon Palace, the Chinese restaurant on 111th (I think), and Steak and Brew (well, there was never one on Morningside Heights but we used to go down to the one on Broadway in the low 50's and eat and drink ourselves to oblivion.)
I could do with a Hoagie Special now and again. However, they're probably unreproducible.
A beloved Morningside Heights bar, The West End, has closed its doors and will reopen in July as a Cuban restaurant, Havana Central. Renovations will increase the restaurant’s capacity to 150 people. A Columbia University School of Business alumnus, Jeremy Merrin, is overseeing the renovations and promises the new restaurant will retain the same charm (and student-friendly prices!) of The West End.
When I went there, they didn't have student-friendly prices, but they did have reasonably good burgers and fries. It was thought of as the postgrad students' bar. But, it's sad to see it join the pantheon of legendary Columbia U. eating places in the Great Restaurant Strip-Mall in the Sky: Mama Joy's, with imported beer and great sandwiches, Ta-Kome, with the Hoagie Special, on which I chomped my way to mammoth obesity, Chock-Full-O'Nuts on the corner of 116th and Broadway with that "Heavenly Coffee" and the date-nut bread, Moon Palace, the Chinese restaurant on 111th (I think), and Steak and Brew (well, there was never one on Morningside Heights but we used to go down to the one on Broadway in the low 50's and eat and drink ourselves to oblivion.)
I could do with a Hoagie Special now and again. However, they're probably unreproducible.