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Originally Posted by Dralcoffin
I'd say Chicago didn't have clear gentrification in the 1970s either. There were a few pockets -- Lincoln Park's Old Town was picking up around this time -- but they were far and few in between.
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I know that SSP skews young, but this is ridiculous.
Gentrification was going on all over the place in the 70's, in Chicago and in many other cities. The idea that gentification is some recent, Gen-Y thing is an odd assumption.
In Chicago, Old Town, Lincoln Park, Lakeview, and the whole Near North Side area had tons of gentrification throughout the 70's. Lakeshore Drive and Sheridan Road on the Northside were basically totally rebuilt with luxury towers during the 60's and 70's.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dralcoffin
Chicago has come a long, long way since the dark days of the late 1980s,
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Has it? Chicago had a half million more people in the 80's, and significantly more jobs than today. It had far less decay than today. There were more jobs downtown, and manufacturing still existed.
Downtown and environs overall are certainly far better now than then, but I don't think most people would argue the city overall wasn't a healthier place 20 years ago. You had massive swaths of strong middle class neighborhoods.
And none of this is limited to Chicago. The "old days" weren't necessarily worse than today. Maybe cities were less optimistic places and trending downward, but they had many strengths relative to today.