Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Tuesday, April 04, 2023

Uphams Corner, Boston: revitalization "without" gentrification

Transforming a building.  "Now and There" by Faith Ninivaggi, 555 Columbus Avenue, Uphams Corner neighborhood, Boston.

The Boston Globe has an interesting article, "Gentrification is washing over America’s wealthiest cities. Here’s how Uphams Corner held back the tide," positing that the neighborhood is a rare example of urban improvement where people of color have not been displaced. 

-- Uphams Corner Planning Initiatives, City of Boston

It cites the work of Common Good Labs, which using "machine learning" came up with eight distinguishing factors identifying 193 neighborhoods across the country where this was the case.

The study identified a small but significant number of high-poverty census tracts — 193 in metropolitan regions all over the country — that managed to slash poverty rates by 10 percentage points or more between 2000 and 2015 without dislodging the areas’ usually Black and Latino populations.

-- "REDUCING POVERTY WITHOUT COMMUNITY DISPLACEMENT: INDICATORS OF INCLUSIVE PROSPERITY IN U.S. NEIGHBORHOODS," Brookings Institution

The eight factors:

External or metropolitan factors

1. Economic growth in the surrounding metropolitan region; low-income people tend to work in service sectors like retail and hospitality and are especially sensitive to the state of the local economy. 

2. Low homicide rates in the county matter, too — likely because violent crime can be a significant source of anxiety for young people, crimping their academic performance and knocking them off track. 

3.  Low risk of displacement in nearby areas; a high-poverty census tract that abuts one with large numbers of 25- to 34-year-olds earning $100,000 or more is more likely to gentrify.

Internal to the neighborhood factors

4.  Higher rates of home ownership (ownership builds wealth); 

5.  Lower vacancy rates (vacancy is associated with crimes like burglary and arson);

6.  Higher rates of self-employment (entrepreneurship can be a path to mobility and set an example for younger people); 

7.  Increases in housing density in the decade leading up to the study period (more units mean low-income people have a place to live even as higher-income people move into the neighborhood); and 

8.  The presence of community-building organizations (which can put up housing and strengthen social ties)

Discussion.  The article has an interesting discussion about how this came about.  First, disinvestment led to a lot of vacant housing, which made it cheap and attractive to immigrants from Cape Verde.  Immigrants are often a source of revitalization energy in cities when communities are otherwise abandoned.

The summer of 1978 saw the first of several block parties on Monadnock Street in Uphams Corner. Bob Haas, who lived on the street for decades, took a series of photographs that captured the joy of the gatherings. A long-time community activist, Haas played a pivotal role in the revival of the once burned-out neighborhood. He died last year at age 76. Photos by Bob Haas

Second, people with choices did move into the neighborhood some, and unlike the in-migrants described in the movie "Flag Wars" in the Old Towne East neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio, they were very much focused on working with the people in the community, not being disconnected "urban pioneers."  

Multi-racial block parties were organized, a community association open to all was created, and eventually, a community development corporation was created which focused on improving properties, and developing new ones, including developing a portfolio of affordable housing which would always be affordable.

Having community organizations that represented community interests and worked on improvements in focused ways is key.

Having heavy rail transit service helps too.  Although its railroad based and inadquately integrated into the intra-city transit network ("A key to a better Boston, hiding in plain sight," Boston Globe).

And that it was adjacent to the Dudley Street neighborhood, which had its own community improvement organization too, Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative, documented in the book Streets of Hope: The Fall and Rise of an Urban Neighborhood.

When neighborhoods become attractive at the scale of the metropolitan area, prices go up.  There is a book on commercial district revitalization, Paths and Pitfalls: On the way to a new vibrancy in Older Retail Districts, about the Manayunk neighborhood of Philadelphia, and he discusses how once the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote about the neighborhood as a changing and desirable place, perceptions changed, and people began buying houses that had previously been overlooked, leading to a long term change in the neighborhood and its demographics.

Being disconnected from what I call the regional landscape of attractive neighborhoods.  Key to warding off displacement is not having to compete with the highest earners for housing, which raises prices, and leads to lower cost housing being converted to higher cost housing.

I've discussed this a lot and it is counter to the Live Baltimore resident recruitment program of what they call "one over neighborhoods" meaning that if you can't afford Bolton Hill, live in Reservoir Hill, can't afford Charles Village?, how about Waverly etc.  This does drive neighborhood improvement, but it comes at the cost of rising housing costs and the possibility of displacement.

Economics.  The economics argument is pretty clear.  Since the 1950s, the reason that the poor congregated in cities is because when city land values declined in the face of suburbanization, the impoverished could afford housing, especially as desperate property owners wanted tenants.  (Before the 1950s, most people lived in cities anyway, so they were a mix of all classes.)

Now that residential choice trends include cities (I won't say "favor" but now cities are seen as equal or superior to suburban location by many segments of the housing market), urban locations are seen as desirable.  

In such situations, the poor will be outbid. 

I've written this for years, but more in terms of the middle class.  


As urban neighborhoods become more desirable at the scale of the metropolitan residential choice landscape, prices will go up, and people who had been able to afford to live there will be outbid.  In short, the highest wage earners are driving the market in the "best" neighborhoods, not average wage earners. 

Equity.  The counterargument is equity, that all people should be able to live in the city, regardless of income (see the "right to the city" arguments" originally articulated by Henri Lefebvre, and extended by people like David Harvey).

In a market economy for housing, to ensure a place for the economically less well off, that requires public intervention to build, own, and operate housing, as well as other subsidies, such as vouchers for people to pay for private market housing.
 
So creating the Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation was key, as was the critical mass of housing purchases by immigrants and others, committing residents to the neighborhood for the long term.

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3 Comments:

At 9:04 AM, Anonymous charlie said...

doing a quick search of the Brooking report for "immigrant" I see the following:


"Neighborhoods with a large decrease in the poverty rate and no community displacement are also demographically stable. The percentage of foreign-born residents was almost exactly the same in these areas in 2000 and 2015. This means the declines in local

poverty rates are unlikely to be the result of wealthier immigrants from the same racial or ethnic group moving in and displacing the existing poor population (e�g�, high-income Nigerian immigrants pushing out American-born Black residents with lower incomes).



Now, not obvious but two caveats to that

1) They are focused on higher income immigrants displacing lower income residents -- but you can have low income immigrants replacing low income residents.

2) In their chart, you can see that their preferred topic -- the communities with large decreases in poverty and little displacement -- have a lot more immigrants as a baseline (30%) and concentrated poverty ones (20%).

They do later note that immigrant communities have higher rates of self employment than native ones, and that is one of the 5 factors.


I do like the concentrated poverty framing. It gets to a lot of the core "woke" issues that bother modern urbanists. That said, displacement is way overrated as a problem. The best thing you can do in concentrated poverty is leave, and valuing a person is more important that valuing an area. See the various Chetty studies.

It would be interesting to use Chetty type tax studies to measure this -- are you really seeing improvement in the 197 census tracts they identify as success.

 
At 10:14 AM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

It would be interesting to visit a number if the communities. Eg the Leimert Park district of LA has been written up on maintaining its black population core. I checked out its commercial district in 2008 maybe and i was surprised at how weak it was.

2. I thought about mentioning Temali's Community Economic Development Handbook. It's focused on commercial districts but relevant, eg wrt microbusinesses and entrepreneurialism. It's hyper focused on "building good neighborhood based jobs.

3. I disagree with you on displacement. I understand your point. But then we're just creating a different problem of social housing being needed etc. And not solving it.

Building it into a community--the article discusses a cooperative built by that CDC and it took a couple decades to pull off--is better than just ignoring that the need exists and will remain so.

Another example would be the Carrolsburg townhouses in Navy Yard. Corner units are actually apartments run by DCHA. So there are still opportunities for low income inclusion with a higher income (newly crested) community. (Speaking of displacement it was built on the site of former public housing. So from that standpoint it's pretty egregious.)

OTOH, the thing I learned from H Street and DC CDCs is that building better housing for poor people doesn't rebuild a neighborhood microeconomics.

So yeah, your point about Chetty is very important.

 
At 10:46 AM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

The interesting thing about Carrollsburg and the low income residents would be to do a "moving to opportunity" study (HUD's determination that it was better to put low income residents in higher income neighborhoods in Suburban Chicago instead of keeping them in impoverished communities in Chicago).

Are there better outcomes in terms of school, jobs, income, etc.?

2. Urgh, the last sentence on the previous comment, microeconomics = microeconomy.

3. I think this shows the importance in places like Uphams Corner of focusing both on neighborhood and commercial district improvement simultaneously.

I had a couple series on this after I left DC.

Neighborhoods
http://urbanplacesandspaces.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-need-for-national-neighborhood.html

CDs
http://urbanplacesandspaces.blogspot.com/2020/02/basic-planning-building-blocks-for.html

 

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