June 14, 2020 Your Neighborhood — Your News® 
 LOCAL 
 CL ASSIFIEDS 
 PA GE 7 
 ‘JACKSON HEIGHTS STRONG’ 
 Espresso 77 cafe owner creates vibrant artwork after boarding up storefront 
 Espresso 77 in Jackson Heights created a vibrant artwork after boarding up their storefront.  Photo by Angélica Acevedo 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 If you pass by Espresso 77, a cafe and  
 wine bar that doubles as a gallery for local  
 artists, you can’t help but stop and admire  
 their  colorful  display,  proclaiming  “Jackson  
 Heights Strong.” 
 The vibrant artwork was created by  
 Afzal Hossain, the owner of the popular  
 cafe located at 35-57 77th St., after they were  
 forced to board up their original glass window  
 display with plywood.  
 On the night of Tuesday, May 26, Hossain  
 said two individuals tried to break  
 into  the  cafe  by  smashing  the  windows  
 with a brick. 
 Julie Nymann, Hossain’s wife, said  
 they got calls from neighbors who saw  
 the attempt and called the police. Hossain  
 spoke  with  police  that  night,  but  
 hasn’t received word that any arrests have  
 been made, as the two individuals fled  
 before anyone arrived. 
 The  incident  occurred  days  before  the  
 Black Lives Matter demonstrations for  
 George Floyd began in New York City. 
 Hossain  didn’t  think  it’d  be  necessary  
 to board up the cafe before the incident, as  
 they  felt  it  brought  beauty  to  their  neighborhood. 
 Still,  Hossain  believes  “everything  
 happens for a  reason.” 
 “It does make me angry, but I said, ‘I  
 cannot  be  angry,  I  need  to  calm  down,'”  
 Hossain said. “So I immediately thought  
 about doing something beautiful.” 
 Nymann said they were able to find an  
 emergency glass repair to fix it the next  
 day, but decided to board it up for the time  
 being since the cafe has remained closed for  
 several weeks due to the COVID-19 health  
 crisis. They’re still not sure when they’ll  
 re-open, as they want to keep their staff and  
 customers safe. 
 But when Hossain and Nymann posted  
 about their shattered window on social media  
 the next day, David Heatley, a cartoonist  
 who lives in the neighborhood, immediately  
 volunteered to help create the artwork  
 and suggested they make it a community  
 project. 
 “I  think  of  their  cafe  as  central  to  the  
 neighborhood,” Heatley said. “I drew a  
 lot of my first books sitting there. I had  
 a gallery show there. I feel very connected  
 to them, and feel they’re important  
 part of the Jackson Heights  
 community.” 
 And  so  they  began  painting  the  next  
 day. A small group of kids, teens and adults  
 from the neighborhood joined Hossain and  
 Heatley to help paint the vibrant display. 
 Hossain said the artwork “came organically” 
  in a “flow of angriness and happiness,” 
   as  they  drew  outlines  of  trees,  fish  
 and more abstract figures with a red, green,  
 blue and yellow color palette. 
 “This kind of came about for unfortunate  
 reasons, but it was a way to continue  
 being a space for creativity,” Nymann said. 
 Espresso  77  has  hosted  live music,  art  
 shows, poetry and a space community  
 members can use as their “living room,” as  
 Hossain puts it, for 12 years now. 
 “We’re  a  community  business,  not  a  
 big  business,”  Hossain,  who  emigrated  
 from Bangladesh more than two decades  
 ago,  said.  “People  are  already  coming  
 and taking photographs. It sends a good  
 message.” 
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