Invincible Cities
I found out about Camilo José Vergara’s photography here, at the New York Times' "City Room" blog. And now, verily, I am a fan. Vergara is chronicling "urban change" in three communities: Richmond, California; Camden, New Jersey; and Harlem. Where I live. Yesterday's post featured the exterior of my building in 1987. Not much has changes since then (landmarked status, baby!) but there are now trees in the avenue's median. And the cars parked outside are newer. Slightly. Those metal fences you see in this shot are new, though. They are much better than rotting chain link. There are now very bright security lights and security cameras now, as well as 24 hour 2-guard patrol. Which is nice. All of that is nice. I'm not complaining.
But something else comes with those kinds of changes. Something... maybe not so nice.
Perhaps the most fascinating thing about Vergara's project is that he has taken photographs of the same buildings or storefronts over a period of years to chronicle how neighborhoods change over time. For instance, the website features over 20 pictures of 65 E. 125th Street, taken between 1977 and 2007, which illustrate its metamorphosis over the past 30 years from an empty but charming storefront into a bright & shiny Sleepy's Matress Store. It's been a chip shop, a bodega, and much else along the way.
Yes, it's gentrification. Or civic beautification. Or something. It's definitely... complicated. It's nice to have services around home, yes. But... but...
Look. A few blocks from where I live, the corner of 145th Street and Frederick Douglass Blvd. has undergone an unbelievable change. It's almost incredible. Gentrification, you have been photographed. Here's the corner in 1998.
Labels: Gentrification

1 Comments:
At 3:34 PM,
Anonymous said…
Yeah, I wish I had done something similar 20 years ago. The gentrification, or just changes, I've seen in my Alphabet City, and later midtown, homes since the 80's is exceptional.
Take the old bank on the corner. It was a Chemical bank in the 80's (a small branch), then it became closed for a long time, then it was a restaurant (Chinese), and now it's a Starbucks.
Bars are usually more stable, because if they make it past a year, they are going to stick around until the owners decide to bail. There was this gay bar, hiding behind the tinted one-way glass window... it was there for years, until the late 90's. Now it's a fratty Murray Hill type bar. The vintage clothes store in the 80's eventually became a Subway store in the 2000's. The little mom & pop pharmacy in the 80's begat a fondue restaurant in the 2000's.
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