A Commentary on 21st Century Gentrification. Lance M. Freeman. Forthcoming in Cityscape

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A Commentary on 21st Century Gentrification Lance M. Freeman Forthcoming in Cityscape The articles presented at the Federal Reserve Research Symposium on Gentrification and Neighborhood Change are indicative of a sea change in gentrification scholarship. In this commentary I place the research presented at the symposium and in this special issue of Cityscape into the context of earlier research on gentrification. In doing so, I aim to show how this scholarship complements our understanding of the process of gentrification and to also show how current efforts might be informed by understanding past scholarship. Gentrification was initially coined a half-century ago by the British sociologist Ruth Glass. She wrote One by one, many of the working class quarters have been invaded by the middle class - upper and lower... Once this process of 'gentrification' starts in a district it goes on rapidly until all or most of the working class occupiers are displaced and the whole social character of the district is changed" (Glass, 1964, p.xvii). Written at a time when central cities across much of Europe and the U.S. were nearing the nadir of their Post-World War II decline this apparently new type of neighborhood change caught many observers by surprise. Gentrification was perhaps all the more startling when observers across the Atlantic started to notice such changes happening in the U.S. Central city decline was were perhaps steeper and more troubling in the U.S. than anywhere else in the Western World. 1

Not surprisingly, this return to the city movement captured significant scholarly attention. The first wave of gentrification scholarship attempted to document the amount of gentrification occurring in U.S. cities, its causes and consequences. Regarding the causes of gentrification, early scholarship pointed to many factors that mirror those presented in the studies presented at the symposium. The Canadian Geographer David Ley was perhaps the foremost proponent of changing tastes among the new middle class that lead to preferences for central city living. This new middle class had tastes, born of their high levels of education and white collar work, that drew them to authentic central city neighborhoods and the type of lifestyles they could create there (Ley, 1980). The findings presented at the Federal Reserve Symposium by Couture and Handbury (2015), Baum and Snow (2016), and Edlund, Machado and Sviatchi (2016) in many ways mirror those produced by the first generation of gentrification scholars in the last decades of the 20 th century. Like Ley, Couture and Handbury (2016) point to tastes, in particular young educated persons attraction to amenities like theaters and bars as a driver of central city locational choices. Also echoing the new middle class thesis put forth by Ley (1980), Baum-Snow and Hartley (2016) find that it is young, highly educated whites who were responsible for much of the population growth near the Central Business District from 2000 to 2010. Finally, Edlund and her colleagues (2016) identify consumption factors, specifically being able to consume more leisure, as an important explanation for the 21 st century gentrification. That these findings echo a central tenet of scholarship on gentrification during the 1970s and 1980s suggests choices and preferences of highly educated young adults were and continue to be an important explanation of gentrification. 2

But the 21 st century vintage of gentrification contrasts in important ways from that which occurred decades earlier. Perhaps most importantly, gentrification in the 1970s and 1980s appears to have happened on a much smaller scale. Indeed, Brian Berry would christen the early gentrification as Islands of Renewal in Seas of Decay (Berry, 1985). In contrast Couture and Handbury (2015) argue that downtown areas experiencing urban revival are small in size, but the aggregate effects are large. Likewise they find neighborhoods closest to the CBD grew fastest 2000-2010 growth in terms of population, white fraction, college fraction and income of all CBD distance bands, and this was a pattern not limited to a few select CBDs. Hwang and Lin (in this volume) draw similar conclusions writing Since 2000 there has been both an increase in socioeconomic status near city centers and also an expansion of this pattern to more neighborhoods and more cities than before (Hwang & Lin, 2016, p. 5). Thus, this latest wave of gentrification appears broader affecting more cities and perhaps more neighborhoods within cities experiencing gentrification. This latest wave of wave of gentrification may also be qualitatively different inasmuch as 1970s-1980s gentrification was much more closely tied to the physical renovation of dilapidated housing. Indeed, news media in the late 1960s and 1970s often described young, white professionals who moved into poor inner city neighborhoods brownstoners because this movement almost always involved the renovation of older brownstones. An article published in 1971 in the Wall Street Journal highlighted the requisite of renovation describing gentrification as happening anywhere there are inner-city neighborhoods that have a stock of deteriorated but potentially fine old housing and a supply of young professional families eager to restore it (Goldberger, 1971). 3

The recent wave of gentrification, however, may be less attached to renovating older dilapidated housing. The studies in this volume trace a general movement of the young and educated to the central city, without specifying whether these neighborhoods have architectural styles (e.g. brownstones, old Victorian homes) that especially attractive or offer impressive investment opportunities. It may be that after nearly a half century of gentrification there are few old distinctive houses in urban areas to be had for a steal. If this latest wave of gentrification has indeed uncoupled housing renovation from upper class movement into the inner city, this may have implications for our understanding of gentrification. For example, the type of person drawn to renovating and restoring old distinctive housing may be different from someone who wants to live in a high rise condo, with concierge service and proximity to their office jobs. Perhaps this is why explanations for gentrification offered in this volume focus more on practical concerns such as proximity to work, availability of retail (Hwang & Lin, 2016) than older scholarship on gentrification which often invoked explanations such as the search for authentic neighborhoods as being a motivation for the back to the city movement. The role of crime is also perhaps different in the 21 st century wave of gentrification. In another paper presented at the Federal Reserve Symposium, Ellen et al. (2016) find evidence that crime does matter in terms of the level of gentrification experienced by a city and where gentrification occurs. Cities experiencing greater declines in their crime rate declines in crime experienced an increased probability of high-income, college-educated, and white households choosing to move into both central city low-income and central city high-income neighborhoods and in select cities households are especially likely to move into the central city neighborhoods where crime is lowest. During the first wave of gentrification, however, crime seemed to play a smaller role. Indeed, the gentrifiers, or brownstoners as they were then called 4

seemed to embrace the risk and grit associated with inner city living. As one early gentrifier in Boston reported: We don t want to make the South End another Georgetown. Not at all. I wouldn t deny that there are problems living here. It s dirty and risky. Gordon (her husband) got mugged last fall. You almost have to expect that (Goodman, 1969, p. 33). The articles presented in this volume also greatly advance our understanding of the impacts of gentrification on the communities undergoing gentrification. Although scholars long debated how gentrification s impacts, data limitations made it difficult to resolve competing claims. In today s era of Big Data it is perhaps not surprising that data can also help us understand the impact of gentrification. Utilizing a relatively novel dataset based on credit scores Lei Ding and Jackelyn Hwang (2016) show the economic impact of gentrification is mixed. Those able to stay may benefit, but those who leave gentrifying neighborhoods seem worse off. These findings represent some of the first to document the economic fortunes of those impacted by gentrification. Dastrup and Ellen s (2016) work, which is presented in this volume, tells a similar story. Public Housing residents, who are able to stay in gentrifying neighborhoods because the rent is subsidized, are more likely to be employed and have modestly higher earnings than their counterparts living in public housing where the surrounding neighborhoods are not gentrifying. Research presented in this volume also sheds light on a relatively understudied aspect of the impact of gentrification those on local businesses. Using the National Establishment Time Series Rachel Meltzer (2016) finds mixed evidence on the impacts of gentrification on small business. At a minimum, gentrification does not appear to result in the wholesale displacement of local businesses as many fear it does. Using a qualitative approach, Nathaniel Parker s (2016) 5

symposium paper shows business owners reactions to gentrification are conditioned on how they perceive this type of neighborhood change. The studies by Meltzer and Parker thus expand our understanding of the gentrification s impacts beyond those felt by individuals and households. The retail sector is an important component of the a community s fabric and community activists, policy makers and scholars alike have debated the rewards and risks gentrification poses for small businesses. The research presented by Meltzer and Parker will go far in helping inform this debate. The final important dimension of the research presented in this volume is in the policy arena. The breadth and depth of the policy options discussed in this volume also represent a sea change in the way policy makers are thinking about gentrification. This sea change appears to be driven by the increasing prevalence of gentrification, rendering the problems associated with gentrification more visible, and the increasing availability of data that can inform efforts to address the negative consequences of gentrification. Jeffrey Lubell s article in this volume thus discusses a wide range of policy tools, many of which were only beginning to be thought of in the 1970s and 1980s as possible tools to address gentrification (Lubbel, 2016). Moreover, the policies and tools described in this volume by Karen Chapple and Miriam Zuk, such Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data, property sales data, and GIS were not readily available or were only in their infancy when policymakers began reacting to gentrification in the late 1970s (Chapple & Zuk, 2016). In this volume Assistant Secretary O Regan also describes efforts by HUD to address affordability problems related to gentrification (O Regan, 2016). While policymakers were cognizant of the pitfalls of gentrification when it first captured observers attention in the 1970s, the overall policy reaction was often muted. For example, the then Deputy Director for Community Conservation Research at HUD would write in 1979 with 6

regard to displacement given the current state of knowledge about displacement, calls for a broad and far-reaching national policy appear to be premature. Given the prevailing trends of central city depopulation he cautioned that Indiscriminate policies to stem displacement may slow or erase the trickle of middle class movement back to the central city. Keeping in mind that these families may help restore some fiscal balance to urban economies (Sumka, 1979, p. 486). As documented by Ellen and Ding s introduction of this volume, gentrification is indeed growing more common in low-income urban neighborhoods in the 2000s than 1980s and the 1990s. Gentrifying neighborhoods experienced much larger socioeconomic changes, namely in race, educational attainment, and rents, in the 2000s. The contrast in these comments from HUD officials highlights the changing nature of gentrification over the course of several decades. Whereas in the 1970s and even 1980s concerns about gentrification could be considered a localized matter dwarfed by the more pressing issues related to central city decline, by 2016 gentrification had become a common concern across much of the nation. The papers presented in this volume thus represent a new chapter on gentrification scholarship. Changes in patterns of gentrification make this volume a timely contribution to our understanding of gentrification. References Baum-Snow, N., & Hartley, D. 2016. Causes and Consequences of Central Neighborhood Change, 1970-2010. Paper presented at the Research Symposium on Gentrification and Neighborhood Change, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. Berry, B. 1985. Islands of Renewal in Seas of Decay. In P. Peterson (Ed.), The New Urban Reality. Washington, DC: Brookings Institute. Chapple, K., & Zuk, M. 2016. Forewarned: The Use of Neighborhood Early Warning Systems for Gentrification and Displacement. Cityscape. Couture, V., & Handbury, J. 2016. Urban Revival in America, 2000 to 2010. Paper presented at the Research Symposium on Gentrification and Neighborhood Change, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. 7

Dastrup, S., & Ellen, I. G.. 2016. Linking Residents to Opportunity: Gentrification and Public Housing. Cityscape. Ding, L., & Hwang, J. 2016. The Consequences of Gentrification: A Focus on Residents Financial Health in Philadelphia. Cityscape. Edlund, L., Machado, C., & Sviatchi, M. 2016. Bright Minds, Big Rent: Gentrification and the Rising Returns to Skill. Paper presented at the Research Symposium on Gentrification and Neighborhood Change, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. Ellen, I. G., Horn, K. M., & Reed, D. 2016. Has Falling Crime Invited Gentrification? Paper presented at the Research Symposium on Gentrification and Neighborhood Change, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. Goldberger, P. 1971. Urban Settlers: With Sweat and Money, Affluent Young Families Unslum a Community. Wall Street Journal (November 29, 1971). Goodman, E. 1969,. The New Brownstone Breed. Boston Globe (April 16, 1969), p. 33. Hwang, J., & Lin, J. 2016. What Have We Learned About the Causes of Recent Gentrication? Cityscape. Ley, D. 1980. Liberal Ideology add Post-Industrial City. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 70, 238-258. Lubbel, J. 2016. Preserving and Expanding Affordability in Neighborhoods Experiencing Rising Rents and Property Values. Cityscape. Meltzer, R. 2016. Gentrification and Small Business: Threat or Opportunity? Cityscape. O Regan, K. M. 2016. Gentrification Commentary: A Federal Perspective. Cityscape. Parker, J. N. 2016. Negotiating the space between avant-garde and hip enough : businesses and commercial gentrification in Wicker Park. Paper presented at the Research Symposium on Gentrification and Neighborhood Change, Federal Reserve Ban of Philadelphia. Sumka, H. J. 1979. Neighborhood Revitalization and Displacement A Review of the Evidence. Journal of the American Planning Association, 45(4), 480-487. 8