![]() “Three hours later, ‘I’m leaving.’ Five hours later, ‘I can’t stand this place. I’m going home,’” Mennis said, mimicking Paxon. “Everytime he comes here - ‘I’m leaving! I hate this place. Neil Paxon, a 61-year-old patron of more than 20 years, is also pleased to hear the good news - despite his usual chit-chats suggesting otherwise. “This is the only sport a 90-year-old person can play,” Chaklal told THE CITY. “I heard! Frankie told me,” Chaklal responded, gesturing to his good friend Frankie Belts.Ĭhaklal, a patron of more than 15 years, said he visits the billiards cafe from his Roosevelt Island home five days a week, spending two to three hours each time practicing pool. “We’re not closing! You’re not losing your homeroom!” “Sid, I have great news for you,” Mennis told 93-year-old Sidney Chaklal as he walked up to the bar. Some patrons cheered on team USA as the Mosconi Cup - an annual nine-ball tournament between a pan-European and an all-American team - played on the TVs overhead. ![]() When THE CITY visited on Friday, Steinway Cafe-Billiards was full of Greek backgammon players, $3 coffees and pool games between long-timers. In a conversation shortly after this article was published, however, Won stressed that her office could not resolve the pool hall’s back rent issues with their landlord or commit to a timeframe in which the pool hall could remain during the construction of Innovation QNS or to a definite location in the project after its projected opening in a decade. “This can only be resolved in the courts,” she said, referring to the poolhall’s backrent issues with its current landlord and noting that those are unrelated to Innovation QNS or its developers. “She told us ‘you have nothing to worry about, we are going to save your location,’” Mennis recalled of her conversation with Won. “Now I can put up a whole schedule for the season.” ![]() “We just feel relieved that we can plan for the future,” Mennis, who’s worked at the pool hall for 22 years, told THE CITY, noting that the majority of the business’s profits come from hosting tournaments. The pool hall will also have the option to relocate into Innovation QNS under a rent discount once the development is complete, Mennis said Won told her. The business will be able to stay in its current location for another three to five years while construction for Innovation QNS begins, according to Mennis - effectively ending a weeks-long search for a new, affordable location. “She mentioned your article, like, three times.” “She said she read your article and that made her make sure we were the first place to be taken care of,” Mennis added. 22, and as a COVID-related rent dispute lawsuit with its current landlord pends in court.īut the neighborhood’s local Council member, Julie Won, stopped by the billiards cafe to deliver good news on Thursday, Mennis said - three weeks after THE CITY reported on what appeared to be the imminent end of the local mainstay. The 32-year-old Astoria pool hall - located at the heart of the incoming $2 billion, five-block development Innovation QNS - was at risk of being shuttered and displaced after City Council approved the project on Nov. Steinway Cafe-Billiards will stay put for now and eventually get a new lease on life one block over, according to manager Athena Mennis.
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