Gentrification Reading Response

What these readings afforded me was a concrete understanding of the processes and systems behind gentrification. Paradigms whose purposefulness I was more or less ignorant too, and having been educated as to their realities I am more or less shocked by how simultaneously devious and pragmatic an institution it is from an industry standpoint. It was also extremely interesting to see the birth of gentrification culture and the values for which pioneer gentrifiers stood, which to me seemed ironic given that the results of the gentrification they brought about were often times the exact opposite of these values. The reading regarding the complex nature of gentrification borders and it’s spread confirmed many of my own suspicions regarding the nature of gentrification, as it is only logical that something as complex as a neighborhoods make up, given all the social, political, and economic factors, would not change in an even and consistent manner.

Disinvestment and Profit

Why bother with upkeep on a building you know will be a money sink, when other ventures are more profitable? It may not be morally just, but it makes sense. And because rent is so expensive in NYC, it’s the disinvestment that’s keeping the prices down. But as the New Urban Frontier reading mentioned, disinvestment is a reversible phenomenon that may not necessarily correlate to gentrification. This also makes sense. Just as one stops upkeep, one can restart it. The problem here is pricing. Landlords need to make money, just as everyone else needs to make money in their occupation. It might seem harsh, but it’s business. If a landlord decides to invest in a previously disinvested building, he’s going to have to do it at a loss or he’s going to have to get the money from somewhere else. Two immediate options come to mind, each in their own way unappealing: raise the rent, or subsidise the building. The issue is immediately apparent in the former; in the latter, we don’t have money to do such a thing, and the cycle continues (raise taxation, or draw funding from other ventures). It’s a messy business, and there’s no immediate solution.

Question: How would you propose to reverse disinvestment without incurring gentrification?

Thinking about research topics…

Here are some themes and ideas – some of which we have covered in class, some of which we will cover in class – to get you thinking about the challenge, problem, or crisis your group will decide to study (remember, your research topic proposal is due next class, 3/10). You are NOT limited to this list, it’s only meant to get you thinking.

Housing
Unaffordable housing (“shelter poverty”)
Homelessness
Vacant land and buildings (“warehousing”/speculation)
Public housing (NYCHA)
Subsidized housing (“inclusionary zoning”)
Displacement and gentrification
NYC’s shelter infrastructure

Climate Crisis
Hurricane Sandy
Rising sea levels
Disaster preparedness
Environmental racism

Income inequality
wage stagnation
precarious labor
privatization of public space

Policing
Police brutality/impunity
Mass incarceration
Stop and frisk
“Quality of life policing”

Reading Response 4

The article “The Birth of Gentrification” constantly refers to the acts of landlords and investors to push towards gentrification, such as Cinderella schemes and homesteading, as schemes. And when reading these articles, I can’t help, but picture gentrification, or the steps to achieve a more gentrified community, as schemes.
I feel a bit ignorant for thinking that gentrification, for the most part, flowed through in an almost natural way. I believed: Of course, everyone wants to save money, even those who have money, so it makes sense that the gentry would start coming and occupying poorer neighborhoods, which invite more gentry, which invite commercial businesses that interest those gentry and as the dynamic of the area changes, the prices rise and the previous residents are forced to leave because they cannot keep up with the increased cost of living. However, I was missing the key factor: the “schemes” of these landlords and others to speed up this process of gentrification in order to make a profit. The series of disinvestment, reinvestment, tax delinquency, brownstoning and homesteading along with creating a public appeal for these changes, pushes towards gentrification. And although, gentrification is usually portrayed in a dark light, one cannot deny the positives of gentrification: it ultimately helps repair the results of disinvestment in a community; that is to say it helps the economy of the community and restores the buildings and other edifices within the area. I guess the real question is how can we receive all the benefits of gentrification without displacing both the existing residents and present cultural aspects of the community?

Reading Response #4

There are different ways to define gentrification as explained in the article by Lees. One way of describing gentrification is when middle class families move into urban areas and as a result, cause an increase in price of property and the removal of the poor families living there. Homesteading is another word that was used in place of gentrification, and it was a vital part to the development of the Lower East Side. Single-family houses were sold to families who would rehabilitate them. In the mid-1970s, the neighborhood of Park Slope was deteriorating and landlords did not have much involvement with keeping housing conditions in order. Smith’s “Mapping the Gentrification Frontier” states that this deterioration is “an essential part of urban development.” Not only does gentrification impact property prices, it also helps to establish a variety of cultures within a neighborhood. While gentrification does help neighborhoods update the housing conditions, bring new communities of people, and also helps introduce new businesses, there are downsides. The major downside is the fact that people who cannot keep up with the cost of living are forced to move elsewhere.

Question: Do you think that the gentrification of neighborhoods has more benefits or downsides?

Reading Response 4

Mapping the gentrification frontier was exceptionally eye-opening. When discussing gentrification, I had always assumed that wealthier buyers simply moved into a lower-rent area, thereby attracting more of their demographic and the services that often cater to their income bracket. I feel stupid now for not having thought that gentrification was an intentional and long-term process initiated by developers and landlords. The multi-step process of disinvestment and reinvestment based on carefully researched demographic statistics is certainly no accident or luck-of-the-draw situation. It is a natural side effect of a capitalist economy that profitable investors will leave before income dips, and seek to find a new area with a large payoff.

These stages of gentrification are seen throughout New York City, in every borough. We focus on areas such as Park Slope as prime examples, but the fact is that gentrification is a cycle- real estate values appreciate and depreciate, the hip areas constantly shift. Of course gentrification has horrible consequences, but the cycle of appreciation and depreciation keeps the city in a balance. It’s also a much ignored fact that gentrification yields positive effects as well. How could we reap the benefits of gentrification without displacing residents?

Gentrification

Gentrification is an economic, cultural, political, social, and institutional circumstance. The main parties are the state that implicated the process as a disinvestor and investor, the private institutions, and the pioneer gentrifiers. Gentrification displaces the working class; it is termed as the replacement of an existing population by the gentry. To change the connotation of gentrification, alternative terms became popular for example brown stoning, homesteading, and revitalization.

Gentrification began in the U.S. and Britain during the postwar urban renewal when old neighborhoods were bulldozed and replaced by modern housing and highways. This eradication led to protests, from historians, architecture buffs, and young middle class families. During my second seminar class and honors English class, we covered gentrification and housing development in NYC, specifically during Robert Moses’ reign. One of the most criticized and heinous crimes done against one of the largest and finest landmarks is the demolition of Penn Station. Protestors quoted “Don’t amputate-renovate.” How would mixed-income housing mollify gentrification?

Birth of Gentrification

Gentrification has existed for quite some time. Despite many new terms like “revitalization” or “back-to-the-city” movement, gentrification still continues to be a destructive process. In The Brownstoner, “they argued that gentrification was not “genocide” but “genesis”. In reality, however, gentrification is only “genesis” for those who are able to make a profit by revitalizing a dilapidated house building and selling it for a higher price to an upper middle-class family. However, the under-emphasized result is the displacement of the low-income families in the area as it becomes more gentrified. As the area becomes more upscale, so does the cost of living, forcing the existing low-income families to move. Under Robert Moses, much of New York City was transformed with expressways and but as many people criticized, displaced hundreds of thousands of people in effect. Even though gentrification may appear to beautify neighborhoods, in reality “brownstoning” has many devastating, behind-the-scenes effects that far outweigh any of its positive effects.

 

Question: How can we improve low-income neighborhoods without necessarily gentrifying them?

Gentrification Reading Response

All around New York, signs of gentrification are obvious. Areas like Cortelyou Road and Park Slope in Brooklyn and the St. George area in Staten Island are a few places that I know the most about in terms of gentrification. Park Slope is one of the areas spoken about in the first reading, “The Birth of Gentrification.” In this reading, two case studies of gentrification were compared. One in Park Slope, Brooklyn and one in Barnsbury, London. It was interesting to see that both areas started off as wealthy, became low income, and then experienced gentrification, becoming wealthy once again. Both also experienced gentrification around the same time, about a decade after the second world war. However, Barnsbury is an example of value gap and Park Slope is an example of rent gap.

In Barnsbury, companies were able to remove tenants for a fee and buy real estate for a very low price. Then they renovated the apartment or house and were able to sell it or rent it at a much higher price. In Park Slope, homesteading and the Brownstone movement, in which pioneers renovated brownstones in order to rent them at exorbitant prices, took hold.

Question: How can we focus on rehabilitation at a reasonable price rather than renovation at an exorbitant price?