Continue reading “ITF Post: Troubleshooting Embedding a Social Explorer Map”
Astoria Group Social Explorer Post
In order to start Naveera logged in through the Brooklyn College library website and based on the video tutorial invited us through the collaborate option on Social Explorer. Then we looked at the areas close to the waterfront close to a recent housing development project called Hallett’s Point which will be the focus of our analysis of gentrification in Astoria. Looking at the Hallet’s Point area between the 2012 and 2016 maps, we can see that rent prices have gone up $300 in the area from around $1,500-$1,800 that’s going to be developed while the nearby public housing prices remained constant at around $600. This lines up with what we’ve seen in gentrification in the past, with increasing rent prices, which will in turn push out the local population that can’t afford it.
By Astoria Group: Chrismal Abraham, Priyanka Algu, Prashanth Thomas, Naveera Arif
ITF Post: Hipsters, Urban Space, and Authenticity in 2018
Yet its worth pointing out the the image of a hipster as a young-ish, DIY-type person living in “gritty” (pre-gentrified) neighborhoods in legacy cities arose in the public imagination during the Great Recession. Why? Well, according to a quote attributed by Coco Chanel, “Hard times arouse an instinctive desire for authenticity.” The Great Recession, then, becomes the backdrop for activities and lifestyle of the hipster: DIY, handmade, artisanal, ironic (“ironic”) clothing that may or may not be flannel.
Continue reading “ITF Post: Hipsters, Urban Space, and Authenticity in 2018”
Gentrification for the Gentrifiers
Gentrification: The most Ungentle Process out there.
of space thus casts light on the myriad ways in which processes of gentrification produce displacement without relocation.” Stabrowski discusses how the Polish people living in Green Point continued to be displaced everyday, and who survived on diminishing resources. Thus, it’s evident that gentrification does not stop even after the official process of moving in has occurred for the new culture, race, or ethnicity. This brought my attention to a video on YouTube, which describes the experience of an individual being kicked out of his own neighborhood.
Continue reading “Gentrification: The most Ungentle Process out there.”
Gentrification and landlord harassment
Gentrification: Do The Poor Really Get Poorer?
Despite these strong evidences, such as Polish immigrants even having to leave the country, Jacob Vigdor in Does Gentrification Harm The Poor? mentions that the analysis provided for gentrification proves that residential displacement “is neither a necessary nor sufficient condition for declines in the living standards of poor households.” This may be true if the Polish immigrants who have returned to their homeland are financially more stable than they were in the United States, and it may be false for the other Polish immigrants who look for housing elsewhere with cheaper rent, but more spending for the cost of living. In other words, this analysis may be inclusive, it is dependent on each displaced individual and the surrounding factors of their households. Kathy Newman and Elvin K. Wily analyzes the extent of gentrification for the past two decades in New York City and found that about 11,651 people were displaced per year between 1999 and 2002, and surely the numbers have gone higher since then. As provided by “Governing”, only 9% of the New York City was gentrified overall between 1990 and 2000 but since then 29.8% of the city has been gentrified.
Continue reading “Gentrification: Do The Poor Really Get Poorer?”
Rezoning Leads to Displacement
Rezoning and the Pitfalls of Mixed Use Zones
The illustration above shows the changes in zoning in Greenpoint and Williamsburg between 2002 and 2012. The fundamental trend that was seen in the last couple of decades regarding areas like Greenpoint and Williamsburg revolved around the idea that the city had too much land zoned for industrial use, much more than necessary. This idea combined with the fact that manufacturing activity has been on the decline in NYC together led to major rezoning that transformed these former manufacturing and industrial districts into residential developments. It is also important to note that there were other external pressures pushing for this kind of rezoning to take effect, like lobbyists that represent large scale developers who were looking to profit. The consequences of this are the reality of our present day. By 2008, NYC was losing industrial employers, which has an extremely negative effect on the local residents of those districts. Manufacturing jobs have greater opportunities for advancement compared to other entry level jobs that do not require a college degree/the English language. Furthermore, industrial jobs pay better than retail and employment, which are analogous to the types of jobs individuals without a college degree/the English language could potentially sustain. In other words, the people that were really suffering from this loss of industrial businesses in our city were immigrants. This is extremely important because it demonstrates exactly how gentrification truly harms the poor and the detrimental effects it specifically had on the Polish community in Greenpoint. At this point the city began to change its course of action and “mixed use zones” were created.
Continue reading “Rezoning and the Pitfalls of Mixed Use Zones”
Gentrification is no longer just an urbanist buzzword…
…it’s here to stay.
Cartoon by Bill Bramhall ( for more cartoons click here: Cartoons)
With sleek high rises and trendy coffee shops opening up at unprecedented rates, gentrification has made its mark on the mainstream socio-political agenda. Rezoning and redevelopment within urban hubs have triggered an increase in property values. While the process of gentrification has much potential to stimulate the economy and improve the quality of life in a neighborhood, it can also shatter the livelihoods of many people – those who are forced to uproot and move out because they can no longer afford to live in an area.
Scholars like Fillip Stabrowski, Jacob Vidgor, and Kathe Newman and Elvin Wyley contribute to the discussion of gentrification by examining the phenomenon from distinct, often overlooked perspectives that complicate pre-existing arguments. In particular, Stabrowski expands the term gentrification to encompass more than just spatial relocation. He says, “I define ‘everyday displacement’ as the lived experience of ongoing loss—of the security, agency, and freedom to ‘make place.’ This is the inherently violent process whereby the systemic nature of capitalist gentrification colonizes ever-greater reaches of the lifeworlds of working class residents” (796). Everyday displacement fuels neighborhood erasure – or the loss of the unique character of a place. Thus in his examination of the evolving landscape of Polish Greenpoint, Stabrowski forces us to consider gentrification as a two-fold process – one that involves displacement from both the personal home and the communal enclave.
Continue reading “Gentrification is no longer just an urbanist buzzword…”