Showing posts with label gentrification. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gentrification. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2011

Hipster-ville, USA


 The Post-Grad’s Hipsters’ Guide to Inhabitable U.S. Cities, for all of you recent graduates or about-to-be-graduates! Map by Cartographer Katie Gillett from: http://therumpus.net/2011/05/post-grad-hipsters-guide-to-inhabitable-u-s-cities/

 This map looks at normalized Google Search volumes by State for ‘hipster.’  Contrary to popular perception, Minnesota comes out as the hippest, New York only at #2.  Although Minnesota has less than 1/3rd the population of New York state, it leads the nation in searches for the term ‘hipster.’   Map source: http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrismenning/the-most-hipster-state-in-the-us

“Looking for an abundance of bike lanes, farmers' markets and bearded dudes? Then head to Minnesota, the most hipster-iffic state in the U.S., according to Buzzfeed's super-official map of American hipsterdom.  The results are actually based on search engine statistics for the word ‘hipster,’ which means that while Minnesotans are readily researching the loaded term, they're probably also most likely to deny being one. It also explains how they beat out New York — it's assumed Brooklynites already know the meaning of the word, or you know, can't be bothered to read about a far-too-frequently analyzed subculture. 
In other words, take these findings with a shaker of salt.  After all, Minnesota is also home to the country's largest shopping mall, not the largest second-hand, vintage clothing store. And as for the all the guys with bushy sideburns, plaid shirts and cans of PBR — I'm pretty sure they're just actual lumberjacks.  Curious to see how your state fared? Check out the map above.”  From http://www.nerve.com/news/current-events/the-most-hipster-state-in-the-us-isnt-new-york:

Some comments in rebuttal to the designation of Minnesota as the #1 Hipster location:

·         Wait, if it's based on amount of search of the term "hipster" doesn't that mean MN doesn't understand what hipsters are and have to do research? I've been to most of the places on that list and the coasts are way more hipster than MN (which is my home state). Minnesota still thinks food trucks are cool. Also, flared jeans are still popular here.

·         Hold on -- you're saying that Minnesota is most hipster-ish based solely on how often people search for the word "hipster"?  That makes absolutely no sense.  By that logic, 13-year-old boys must have the world's biggest boobs.

·         Easy on the Brooklyn bashing.  It is the way it is because it's full of Midwestern transplants. They aren't emulating Minnesotans.  They are more than likely Minnesotans huddled together in an ironic enclave they created in NY...

 The Fake MTA has released what they are calling a “Hipster-friendly subway map.”  Do hipsters really talk about going to Brighton Beach that much? From: The Gothamist at http://gothamist.com/2010/05/21/map_hipster_friendly_mta.php



And now, from the Left Coast, “New Real Estate Map Has Some Losing Hipster Cred, Gaining Sales Value,” map by Kaitlin Jaffe/Jennifer Rosdail, of Paragon Real Estate Group, as reported by Lynda Chavez in Mission Local at http://missionlocal.org/2010/07/new-sf-real-estate-map-has-some-losing-hipster-cred-gaining-sales-value/ 

There has been lots of push-back on this map, what with the real estate industry’s unofficial re-naming of neighborhoods in SF, extension of neighborhood boundaries to augment gentrification efforts and increase asking prices, virtual red-lining of black communities (by segregating them outside the boundaries of the hipster neighborhoods and calling them by their original names, while the white people’s (hipsters') areas have been re-named something else), and in general escalating the already crazy housing prices in the city.

As an end note to all of this, it should be mentioned that no self-respecting hipster would want to be called a hipster. Of course not! That wouldn’t be ironic enough! Anyway, in many circles they are also known by the term “douchebag-slackers,” which they don’t like, either, for some odd reason. Oh, well! What do I know! I am probably an aging hipster, myself, and have been called far worse in my day!


Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Cupcakes and Gangs, Gentrification and Guns: Spatial Conflicts in San Francisco


Map showing the spatial coincidence of cupcake shops and gang territories in San Francisco, CA. 

I think the map (and the analysis) is somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but I very much like the idea of viewing the spread of the cupcake shops as a metric of gentrification, although one of the referenced web links brought up the valid point that this metric would change over time, as fashions changed.  In the 1990's, it might have been the proliferation of Starbucks coffee houses that indicated gentrifying neighborhoods, and in the 1980's, perhaps gourmet yoghurt shops moving into an area, etc.  I don’t know about other cities, but in NYC where I live, right now it would be the new doggie day care centers that are springing up in many places that appear to designate a change to a more affluent, up-and-coming hipster-ish nabe.  
Obviously, the map above is not trying to show that the advent of cupcake shops in a neighborhood is connected in any causal way to crime rates, (or vice versa) but it’s an indicator of the gentrification process in areas where perhaps the original occupants and their activities are not being modified as quickly as expected by the gentrifiers, as evidenced by the continued gang-related violence at the doorsteps of the aforementioned cupcake shops.  The people interviewed in the article, the local hipsters and the baristas, at least, all seem to have the attitude “everything is fine, the violence has nothing to do with ‘us,’ and just keep the blood out of my latte.” 
A couple of years ago, an undergraduate student in the GISc program (Aris Polanco) did his capstone GISc research project on gang injunctions and crime in San Francisco - he was trying to see if areas where the police had instituted injunctions were the actual crime hotspots, or whether the police were just setting the boundaries of the injunction areas to control the gang activities (which are not necessarily all crime-related) and minimize the presence of the gangs, in order to foster gentrification.  Excerpting from Polanco’s project report: “The goal [of the research] is to determine if Gang Injunctions are implemented in the neighborhoods with the highest crime rates or in neighborhoods that are rapidly gentrifying... A civil gang injunction is a spatial crime control mechanism that prohibits alleged gang members and their associates from doing certain things (usually association with one another, loitering, and other activities, many of which are already crimes) in specific geographic areas.  Because of these restrictions civil rights groups have challenged the constitutionality of these measures and claim that they violate many civil liberties (American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, ACLUNC).  Recently the City of San Francisco has implemented gang injunctions (GI) in three neighborhoods, against five gangs as a means to reduce crime.  It has been hypothesized that gang injunctions are implemented to prevent the movement and interaction of poor minorities within areas that contain an economic interest from developers (Stewart 1998). Alejandro Alonso, a geography Ph.D. candidate at the University of Southern California, who studied gang injunctions in Los Angeles County, argues that, ‘If you map out every gang injunction in LA County, you will observe a pattern of 'privileged adjacency'... In Los Angeles, every gang injunction seemed to target a gang that was located in an area that has more affluent concerns....’ (Barajas 2009).”
Polanco found that, indeed, the areas where the gang injunctions had been placed coincided spatially with the areas that had been officially set up by the city planners for redevelopment, and were not necessarily the crime hot spots – although they were also not the areas with low crime rates, either.  “Although it is difficult to precisely relate the implementation of gang injunctions to gentrification, this research supports the notion that gang injunctions are implemented in areas undergoing gentrification, rather than in areas that only have a serious crime problem,” (Polanco, 2009).  And therefore making these places safer for cupcake shops.   


All gang injunctions fall totally or partially within the boundaries of development areas.
Map by Aris Polanco






























Thanks for sending, Lesley Kunikis!  This is quite interesting.  
Mapping gangs and cupcakes

The original account in the “Mission Local” blog

Cupcakes as a metric of gentrification

Some references from Polanco’s paper, for those interested in reading more about gang injunctions:

Frank P Barajas, 2009.  An Invading Army: A Civil Gang Injunction in A Southern California Chicana/o Community.  Latino Studies 5:4, 393-417
Grogger, Jeffrey, 2002.  The Effects of Civil Gang Injunctions on Reported Violent Crime: Evidence from Los Angeles County.  Journal of Law and Economics 45: 69–90. 
Maxson, Cheryl L., Hennigan, Karen M., Sloane, David C., 2005.  It's Getting Crazy Out There: Can a Civil Gang Injunction Change a Community? Criminology and Public Policy 4:3, 577-605.
Polanco, Aris, 2009.  Spatial Analysis of the Relationship between Gang Injunctions and Gentrification in San Francisco.  Unpublished study.
Stewart, Gary, 1998.  Black Codes and Broken Windows: The Legacy of Racial Hegemony in Anti-Gang Civil Injunctions. The Yale Law Journal 107(7): 2249–2279.