50 Eldridge St Fl 6
New York, NY 10002
(646) 666-8550
Inhabit Karaoke Lounge is a Karaoke Box style bar located in Manhattan Chinatown. Situated on a third floor encompassing more than 5,000 square feet of contemporary designs bar and suites. Multi layered of sliver wave palette are highlighted through out the lounge with L.E.D lights. It is doubtless that Inhabit Karaoke Lounge is one of kind venue for your after work happy hours, wedding celebrations, birthday parties, private and corporate functions. We have 8 suites in 5 capacities, each catering to different size groups. The largeest room accommodates up to 35 people. Each room comes equipped with 42" to 58" LCD monitors. L.E.D. lighting control, disco light as well as a touch screen that linked to our 120,000 songs database. Available in English, Chinese, Korean and Japanese. We are located at 39 Eldridge Street, 3rd Floor, New York, NY 10002. (Between Canal Street & Hester Street) To make reservation, please call (212)965-1588 Our Rate: Small Room - $40/hour (up to 6 people) Meduim Room - $50/hour (up to 10 people) Large Room - $60/ hour (up to 17 people) Ex-large Room - $80/hour (up to 25 people) VIP Room - $100/hour (up to 35 people)
The Eldridge Street Synagogue, built in 1887, is a National Historic Landmark synagogue in Manhattan's Chinatown neighborhood.HistoryThe Eldridge Street Synagogue is one of the first synagogues erected in the United States by Eastern European Jews (Ashkenazis). One of the founders was Rabbi Eliahu the Blessed (Borok), formerly the Head Rabbi of St. Petersburg, Russia. It opened at 12 Eldridge Street in New York's Lower East Side in 1887 serving Congregation Kahal Adath Jeshurun. The building was designed by the architects Peter and Francis William Herter, (but unrelated to the Herter Brothers cabinet-makers). The brothers subsequently received many commissions in the Lower East Side and incorporated elements from the synagogue, such as the stars of David, in their buildings, mainly tenements. When completed, the synagogue was reviewed in the local press. Writers marveled at the imposing Moorish Revival building, with its 70-foot-high vaulted ceiling, magnificent stained-glass rose windows, elaborate brass fixtures and hand-stenciled walls.Thousands participated in religious services in the building's heyday, from its opening through the 1920s. On High Holidays, police were stationed in the street to control the crowds. Rabbis of the congregation included the famed Rabbi Abraham Aharon Yudelovich, author of many works of Torah scholarship. Throughout these decades the Synagogue functioned not only as a house of worship but as an agency for acculturation, a place to welcome new Americans. Before the settlement houses were established and long afterward, poor people could come to be fed, secure a loan, learn about job and housing opportunities, and make arrangements to care for the sick and the dying. The Synagogue was, in this sense, a mutual aid society.
MINI/Goethe-Institut Curatorial Residencies Ludlow 38 is the Goethe-Institut New York’s contemporary art space, made possible with the generous support of MINI. Located on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, it has provided for curatorial experimentation in the tradition of the German “Kunstverein” since 2008. Its mission is to introduce new international perspectives to the downtown art community and to foster dialogue within the aesthetic and political context of New York and the United States. Initially programmed by a different Kunstverein every year, the space was relaunched in 2011 as a residency program for young curators from Germany.
Scaramouche opened its doors on February 28, 2009 with the group exhibition, "The Practice of Joy Before Death; It just would not be a party without you" which brought together an eclectic and exciting group of artists living and working in the New York area. The gallery is dedicated to the bold and enlightening journeys of both the emerging and established artist. Working in a variety of media, from the traditional to the more unusual and innovative, these artists explore contemporary reality through site-specific installation, with particular emphasis on conceptual and identity-based painting, photography, video and performance work. It is Scaramouche’s mission to introduce artists from around the globe, often premiering their first U.S. solo exhibitions. In addition to showing the work of gallery artists, Scaramouche regularly produces group exhibitions comprised of diverse artists representing a broad range of work.
Dress Code is a boutique production company led by founders Dan Covert and Andre Andreev. Dan is from Ohio, Andre is from Bulgaria. They met while studying graphic design at California College of the Arts, where they first began to collaborate. To this day everything they do is filtered through a designed lens. With backgrounds in Direction, Production, Design and Animation Dan and Andre founded Dress Code to create content that wasn’t defined by a certain style or limited to any particular medium. Their staff is made up of people with diverse career paths who bring unique perspectives to everything they create. Dress Code’s work has been recognized by SXSW, The Webby Awards, Vimeo Staff Picks, Short of the Week, AFI Docs, Seattle International Film Festival, One Screen and ADC Young Guns. They balance their time doing commercial work and self funded films, intentionally staying small and selective so they can stand behind everything Produced and Directed by Dress Code.
The rarest form of art to be found in the New York jungle. Both emerging and established artists exhibited for the love of true art
AICH is open Monday - Friday from 9:30 am to 5:30 PM. If you would like to visit AICH, please call (212) 598-0100. We look forward to seeing you!