ext_35847 (
on-reserve.livejournal.com) wrote in
davis_square2006-01-03 01:06 pm
Entry tags:
Gentrification
Hey All,
Posting this as it came up for me in a previous post that was sort of an amalgam of "eccentric and annoying Davis Square traits."
I realize this is a hot-button issue but I trust that people can express themselves civilly. Ok, I *hope* we can.
Gentrification. It's a big deal. People in this community talk an awful lot about how we don't want Davis to "turn into another Harvard" but in some sense the people living there now and who have populated the square over the past decade *have* turned Davis into something different from what it was.
How does one say, "I don't want Davis Square to get too gentrified" without taking responsibility for being part of the gentrification that has happened thus far? Who decides how much gentrification is too much, not enough, just right?
Maybe Davis is better, maybe it's not -- it probably depends on who you ask and what they were looking for in a neighborhood when they picked Davis.
Posting this as it came up for me in a previous post that was sort of an amalgam of "eccentric and annoying Davis Square traits."
I realize this is a hot-button issue but I trust that people can express themselves civilly. Ok, I *hope* we can.
Gentrification. It's a big deal. People in this community talk an awful lot about how we don't want Davis to "turn into another Harvard" but in some sense the people living there now and who have populated the square over the past decade *have* turned Davis into something different from what it was.
How does one say, "I don't want Davis Square to get too gentrified" without taking responsibility for being part of the gentrification that has happened thus far? Who decides how much gentrification is too much, not enough, just right?
Maybe Davis is better, maybe it's not -- it probably depends on who you ask and what they were looking for in a neighborhood when they picked Davis.
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Valet parking on Highland for Sauce. That's my yardstick. Real Davis motorists don't need valet parking, they just need parking, period.
I realize this will be an unpopular viewpoint, so consider this a "nyer" in advance.
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Course, as a non-car-owner, I do get a certain schadenfreude watching traffic and reading Snow Emergency updates.
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...and this would be why I live where I have off-street parking.
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It happens everywhere. It's happening in Providence, it's happening in Fort Point - name any neighborhood, practically.
I guess the most we can do to combat it is to get more involved politically. I am sure Mr. Ron Newman will be happy to weigh in on how we can help. ;) We can look at the legislature of cities/neighborhoods which still have the quirky shops and the strong sense of community, but not the chain stores (I am thinking Martha's Vineyard, even though I hate it there).
That being said (boy am I ranty today) I really really abhor the way some of the longtime residents regard us "transients." I've seen on the Somerville News website (just don't go there, it is all trolls) things written such as, "It used to be that everyone had an Irish or Italian last name and their family had been here since..." something that reminds me of WWII Germany. Some people can be so small-minded.
But I try to sympathize, I think it's important to look at both sides of a situation... I can see how someone would want to keep their neighborhood the same. But what it comes down to is, change is inevitable, and fearing the unfamiliar is ridiculous.
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That being said (boy am I ranty today) I really really abhor the way some of the longtime residents regard us "transients." I've seen on the Somerville News website (just don't go there, it is all trolls) things written such as, "It used to be that everyone had an Irish or Italian last name and their family had been here since..." something that reminds me of WWII Germany. Some people can be so small-minded.
That kind of provincialism is peculiar to Boston, and comes from the fact that except for international immigration, virtually nobody moved here for about 40 years starting in the mid-50s. Massachusetts experienced a huge population loss during that time. There were a number of reasons for this that would take a while to go into, but when that happens, neighborhoods and towns become very insular, because new ideas and new people aren't coming in.
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Then there were the taxes. You've probably heard this place termed "Taxachusetts." That's no longer true, despite the extent to which conservatives still call it that. But the name persists and for a good many years it was quite accurate.
When the tax base started to erode you started to have what's been termed the "death spiral". High taxes cause productive residents and businesses to leave, so there's no choice but to raise taxes on those who are left, until the higher taxes induce *them* to leave, and so on.
There was a popular t-shirt in the 80s that said "Will the last person to leave Massachusetts please turn out the lights?"
That all changed with the Mass Miracle of the early 90s. Broad-based tax cuts along with the ascendancy of the tech economy really did bring this state back from the grave.
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I was born in and grew up in a suburban college town: Davis (ironic, eh?), Calif. I basically refused to learn to drive, and as soon as I could moved to Sacramento, the closest "city." Which it really wasn't; it was an older suburban sprawl. Finally, I escaped to places like Montreal and San Francisco, and finally (after a brief detour into Atlanta, aka "Bad LA") on the cusp of Davis and Porter.
I love it here and have been in the same apartment for over 5 years. Why? Because everything I need is within 10 or fewer blocks of my home. Grocery, live music, books, hardware, all sorts of ethnic food, two T stations, dry cleaners, veterinarian, Goodwill (for when I clean out my closets), pet store, pharmacy...without a car or even without requiring public transportation, I can get everything I need to survive. Add to the fact that I consider Harvard and Union Squares "walking distance" and I'm living my lifelong dream.
There's not a lot of places left in the world where you can do everything you need to without leaving your feet. I appreciate living here every day.
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But I'm with you on not learning to drive. Didn't do that until this year, and that only because biking six miles to work (outside of public transit range) gets a bit annoying when it is 15 degrees out.
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All of this is a double-edged sword, though. It's nice to support local businesses, but it sucks to constantly pay more. The nearest Target is a 45-60 minute drive away, so sometimes there doesn't feel like the only choice is to suck it up and pay.
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180 Somerville Ave. Just head down Highland Av and veer right.
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Their library section rivals some of the used book stores in terms of great scores I've gotten there. And for $0.79 a piece rather than half-price.
Book "trash" in a college/intellectual/geeky neighborhood = big bargains for yours truly :)
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Diesel, MacIntyre & Moore, the new, improved Somerville Theater, Diva--to me these are the newcomers that breathed a bit of new life into the square. They changed things, not always for the good, but on balance made positive contributions. I can't remember what the McDonald's replaced, but even that is okay by me.
But my god, if the trend is toward things like Pluto, Gargoyle's, and Sauce, then it's all over and we may as well be living in Harvard Square. I'll take a Subway and a Quiznos both IN THE SAME BUILDING over that crap.
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McDonald's, past and present
Jamaica Plain - sound familiar?