See more of our coverage in your search results.
This is the roughest barroom brawl in town.
The legendary downtown dive 169 Bar says their landlord is trying to hijack its now-famous trademark and reopen a copycat bar in the exact same spot using the original owner’s hard-earned brand recognition, a bombshell lawsuit claims.
The longtime family-controlled property owner Maria Kolon quietly went behind the bar owner’s back to register the 169 Bar name and its famous martini logo with the federal government, the suit claims, and is allegedly plotting to re-open a copycat bar in the same spot.
“Defendants have indicated that they plan to offer bar services to consumers at the same location under the identical 169 BAR marks,” the Manhattan Supreme Court filing states, “despite lack of ownership or quality control rights, and have pursued federal applications for Plaintiff’s marks.”
“They’re trying to screw me over,” says current owner Charles Hanson.
Kolon did not respond to a request for comment.
The trademark lawsuit comes while a long-running and contentious eviction suit plays out in the background, where Hanson, 71, says the landlords strung him along over a new lease only to renege at the last minute.
“The trademark thing is like pouring salt on the wound,” Hanson told The Post.
The former bike messenger and DJ bought the bar in 2006 after he was run over by a limousine and got a six-figure payout, and says the only reason the iconic name and logo is valuable is because of how he transformed the bar into a dive hotspot.
The watering hole has attracted celebrities like actors Zoe Kravitz, Cillian Murphy, and Jason Momoa. Comedian Aziz Ansari has also been a patron, and his “Master of None” character, Dev Shah, partied there on the show.
Hanson explained that decades ago, the Podbielska family owned both the building and ran the bar — which was more of an eatery back then.
Jolanta Podbielska, Maria Kolon’s mother, allegedly designed the infamous martini-glass sign — and even tended bar back in the 1950s — but sold it in 1999 for just $30,000.
Hanson explained that decades ago, the Podbielska family owned both the building and ran the bar — which was more of an eatery back then.
When Hanson bought the bar using his limo-injury cash, he said it had a blacked-out vibe of a scuzzy social club whose main attraction was oil-wrestling.
But he turned it into a bustling dive, and today enjoys mainstay status as a hyper-popular fixture of ultra-hip Dimes Square.
Hanson’s work is backed up by years of unsolicited media coverage by national and city publications, over many years,” the suit claims, cementing a reputation for cheap beer and drinks, its distinctive “NOLA vibes” and “truly weird and fun” details, like a leopard-print pool table, $5 tarot readings, an aquarium centerpiece and a “youthful regular crowd.”
Hanson actually had a federal trademark registered in 2014, but it lapsed without his knowledge during the height of the pandemic in 2020, when he notes he never missed a single rent payment.
He didn’t realize the mistake when he told Page 6 about his trademark back in March — and just days later, Kolon filed a new trademark application, claiming she and her newly-created LLC have continuously used the sign since 1977 when her mother allegedly created it.
“I think the trademark has value because of the work I put into it,” said Hanson, “because I don’t think it was this value before.”
“I don’t think that they’re compensating me for that,” he said of the sneaky move.