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Where Exactly Do You Stand on Gentrification?

3 Comments

  • Anon resident
    Posted January 13, 2015 at 4:36 pm

    It’s interesting that you use the Langton Building in your photo located on 145th Street. This corner was left abandoned for decades. Let’s note the building had scaffolding all around it for years due to construction defects. If people decide to move into a neighborhood because they think they can afford living there and they meet the salary requirements is that gentification? Is it wrong that the consumers in this building have had a major increase in maintenance due to no oversight by the city & the buildings department. Today walk by this building and you will see the Sutton, named after Percy Sutton surrounded by scaffolding because bricks fell from the building. Is Congressmember Rangel accountable for this? Does his staff respond or address these issues? NO Same goes for Assembly Member Farrell’s office.

  • native new yorker
    Posted January 14, 2015 at 12:57 pm

    You can’t stop gentrification or even clearly define it. Better to have higher income people wanting to live in NYC than not wanting to live here. I know the insane housing price run-up in Brooklyn is pricing people out. (Is it a bubble? I think so.) But you can’t legislate against it .I live on the east shore of SI which is already ‘gentrified’ in that we have the 2nd highest income after Manhattan.

  • Gib Veconi
    Posted January 15, 2015 at 3:58 pm

    Talking about gentrification in New York City is like the weather: whether you like it or not is subjective, but it isn’t going away. The important questions are what’s causing it, and how bad the forecast looks. Right now, in neighborhoods like Crown Heights, Bed Stuy and Bushwick, a tsunami is coming, and it’s being fueled by real estate speculation, which is in turn fueled by macroeconomic and social trends that won’t fit into this comment box. Just like we manage threats from natural disasters, we need more focus on resiliency, as well as on building relief infrastructure to be prepared when resiliency fails.

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