You are reading

New restaurant opens on 34th Avenue

August 4, 2013 By Bill Parry

A restaurant called Mar’s has opened in Astoria after two years of planning and construction.

The restaurant, located at 34-21 34th Avenue, is currently offering diners oysters, shrimp and lobster from a raw bar—with beverages ranging from microbrew beer to classic cocktails to organic wines. However, the menu is likely to expand later this summer to include new American cuisine, once the kitchen is completed.

Mar’s took over the space that was occupied by a Greek restaurant called Taverna Sofia.

Evangelos Roumeliotis, the owner, said the space needed extensive renovation down to its sub floors.

Roumeliotis and his carpenter Tom Fade spent the last 10 months constructing the restaurant’s interior with reclaimed wood and salvaged pieces collected on multiple trips along the back roads of upstate New York and Pennsylvania.

This is the 4th time the two have collaborated on construction projects including two establishments still owned by Roumeliotis: The Sparrow Tavern and a tattoo parlor called The Queens Ink (both are next door to each other at 24-01 29th St.).

At Mar’s the front of the bar is made of pews from an upstate courthouse and the beer taps flow from a tower made from an antique roll-top desk.

Roumeliotis designed retro-style audio speakers for the audio system that plays 1930s jazz by day and rock at night.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Brooklyn man indicted on manslaughter, DWI charges in deadly Astoria crash that killed the mother of his child: DA

A Brooklyn man was indicted by a Queens grand jury on charges of manslaughter, drunk driving and other crimes for a fatal collision in Astoria that killed his long-time girlfriend and mother of their young child in February.

Ray Perez, 27, of Caton Avenue in Flatbush, was arraigned Thursday in Queens Supreme Court on a 13-count indictment charging him with vehicular manslaughter for allegedly speeding through a stop sign in Astoria, colliding with another vehicle and slamming into two parked cars, and then driving nearly four miles away to a street in Maspeth before seeking help for his 29-year-old girlfriend Bridget Enriquez, who later succumbed to her injuries.