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Originally Posted by
corwin1968
Still finding this discussion (and more generally, this entire topic) to be fascinating. I moved to the Putnam City North area back in the late 90's when I got an apartment at Britton & McCarthur, right next to Lake Hefner. Federally subsidized housing destroyed the area in which I was living and I fled to 122nd & Rockwell and a gated condo complex and then bought a house out past NW 178th.
I had to look up the definition of "gentrification" and it turns out to be a phenomena that I'm aware of without knowing the proper term. My question would be, where do all of the lower income people go when this happens? They don't just disappear, they move somewhere else and that area likely suffers. It seems that for every area that is gentrified, another suffers for it. Is it just a cycle that goes on and on with different neighborhoods being gentrified, eventually degrading and then being gentrified again? Do the poor and non-poor just periodically (over decades) change places?
I really should get some reading material on community planning. This is really interesting stuff!
I really like the idea of "new urbanism" influenced development so long as it remains completely voluntary. I do have a problem with social engineers trying to force people, who would prefer to live in a more suburban setting, to live in urban areas.
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