Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Are you the flipper who posted earlier? I meant has N Street Village prevented "end stage gentrification"
Urban liberals like to view economically and socially disadvantaged minorities like they are some kind of "pet". A creature too stupid or inept to take care of itself, so it becomes a modern day White Man's Burden to look after these poor unfortunates, who just can't make it without the support and nuturing from a wealthy white benefactor.
That disgusitng attitude goes a long way towards explaining N street Village
Anonymous wrote:
Are you the flipper who posted earlier? I meant has N Street Village prevented "end stage gentrification"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't speak for NY. I've never worked there. I can only speak for DC, where l was born. And I have a much keener sense of it's history and demographics than you likely do.
So tell me, what impact has N Street Village had on Logan Circle?
Mostly it helps with assuaging white guilt and letting them feel better about themselves, which was the goal.
What did Nietzsche say about altruism?
That it was all self-serving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't speak for NY. I've never worked there. I can only speak for DC, where l was born. And I have a much keener sense of it's history and demographics than you likely do.
So tell me, what impact has N Street Village had on Logan Circle?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in Baltimore gentrification could proceed without displacement
Displacement is crucial for successful end-stage gentrification
The people willing to pay $400,000 for a painted lady (google it) with no parking or a 5,000 sq ft warehouse loft space don't want to live amongst the original population. They want to be surrounded by people like them, not by hoodrats.
This sounds like trolling to me. And of course the experience in DC, Alexandria, NYC, etc is quite different.
Just an owner of a company that's made a very good run of renovating homes in places where gentrification is occurring.
I've been able to see and study it up close since 1986, when we did our very first home remodel in a run down ghetto called "Logan Circle".
And if you knew the whole history of Georgetown, instead of just what you think you know, you'd realize how right I am.
Gentrification has stages. Georgetown represents the end-stage. U-street is advanced mid-stage. H-street NE is early mid-stage. Minnesota Ave NE and Alabama Ave SE is early-stage.
The gentrifiiers that can afford the mid-stages, can't afford the end stage. And they're being used, as a tool, by the people who CAN afford it, to push out anyone who used to live in that neighborhood, and make it suitable for them. It seems it takes about 15 years or so to make the transition from each stage, based on what I've seen.
So no one really cares that it "sounds like trolling" to you.
Anonymous wrote:I can't speak for NY. I've never worked there. I can only speak for DC, where l was born. And I have a much keener sense of it's history and demographics than you likely do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in Baltimore gentrification could proceed without displacement
Displacement is crucial for successful end-stage gentrification
The people willing to pay $400,000 for a painted lady (google it) with no parking or a 5,000 sq ft warehouse loft space don't want to live amongst the original population. They want to be surrounded by people like them, not by hoodrats.
This sounds like trolling to me. And of course the experience in DC, Alexandria, NYC, etc is quite different.
Just an owner of a company that's made a very good run of renovating homes in places where gentrification is occurring.
I've been able to see and study it up close since 1986, when we did our very first home remodel in a run down ghetto called "Logan Circle".
And if you knew the whole history of Georgetown, instead of just what you think you know, you'd realize how right I am.
Gentrification has stages. Georgetown represents the end-stage. U-street is advanced mid-stage. H-street NE is early mid-stage. Minnesota Ave NE and Alabama Ave SE is early-stage.
The gentrifiiers that can afford the mid-stages, can't afford the end stage. And they're being used, as a tool, by the people who CAN afford it, to push out anyone who used to live in that neighborhood, and make it suitable for them. It seems it takes about 15 years or so to make the transition from each stage, based on what I've seen.
So no one really cares that it "sounds like trolling" to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in Baltimore gentrification could proceed without displacement
Displacement is crucial for successful end-stage gentrification
The people willing to pay $400,000 for a painted lady (google it) with no parking or a 5,000 sq ft warehouse loft space don't want to live amongst the original population. They want to be surrounded by people like them, not by hoodrats.
This sounds like trolling to me. And of course the experience in DC, Alexandria, NYC, etc is quite different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in Baltimore gentrification could proceed without displacement, due to lots of vacant land and buildings.
But it seems that in recent years most gentrification has focused on formerly working class white areas such as Locust Point, Hampden, Brewers Hill, etc.
It seems to have stalled out in african american areas,like Hollins Market, near Charles Village, west of Patterson Park, etc.
Has Baltimore exhausted the supply of easily transformable areas? Is there sufficient demand to transform the harder areas?
You do realize that all that vacant land exists because (poor, black) people already were displaced.
If you define displacement as people leaving for any reason. I meant displacement by gentrification. The places with all the vacant land and houses have not experienced gentrification.
They (not all, but many) have experienced displacement due to a gentrification plan that failed. The area around the Hopkins Medical campus is a key example. People left because homes were taken by eminent domain: https://www.baltimorebrew.com/2013/02/19/book-on-hopkins-redevelopment-by-a-leader-of-the-opposition/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in Baltimore gentrification could proceed without displacement, due to lots of vacant land and buildings.
But it seems that in recent years most gentrification has focused on formerly working class white areas such as Locust Point, Hampden, Brewers Hill, etc.
It seems to have stalled out in african american areas,like Hollins Market, near Charles Village, west of Patterson Park, etc.
Has Baltimore exhausted the supply of easily transformable areas? Is there sufficient demand to transform the harder areas?
You do realize that all that vacant land exists because (poor, black) people already were displaced.
If you define displacement as people leaving for any reason. I meant displacement by gentrification. The places with all the vacant land and houses have not experienced gentrification.
Anonymous wrote:The fact of the matter is that gentrifying Baltimore will make the city much more competitive. Not trying to be racist, but the city decayed the minute it elected a black Mayor.