Brooklyn Chic
#1
Original Poster
Joined: May 2003
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Brooklyn Chic
When did Brooklyn become so chic. Areas like Red Hook, Williamsburg? I grew up in Brooklyn in Bensohurst and moved in 1980 to Southern California. Neighborhoods were so unsafe you would not even want to drive through them. Now I see on travel shows these areas are cool and chic. I know Manhatten was cleaned up like Times square.
Just wondering?
Thanks
Just wondering?
Thanks
#2
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 57,886
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Just so you know Harlem is also chic (check out the multi-million $ brownstones on Strivers' Row), many people are moving to Inwood as one of the only affordable areas of Manhattan and Washington Heights is gentrifying. You've been gone 30 years and much of the city has changed.
Astoria and Long Island City are also becoming trendy with a lot of luxury highrises.
Astoria and Long Island City are also becoming trendy with a lot of luxury highrises.
#6
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 57,886
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You're talking 40 (FORTY!) years ago. Of course things have changed.
What hasn't?
And the nearby areas of Brooklyn have been upscale for the bet part of 20 years. If you've been back since don;t know how you missed it.
I bought my 1 bedroom co-op on the upper west side in 1986 for $160K - and sold it - in a totally gentrified area - 4 years ago for almost $750K - in a non doorman middle class building.
And despite the late fall in prices - it's still worth essentially that - per a friend who sold a similar a few months ago.
This is a totally different New York.
What hasn't?
And the nearby areas of Brooklyn have been upscale for the bet part of 20 years. If you've been back since don;t know how you missed it.
I bought my 1 bedroom co-op on the upper west side in 1986 for $160K - and sold it - in a totally gentrified area - 4 years ago for almost $750K - in a non doorman middle class building.
And despite the late fall in prices - it's still worth essentially that - per a friend who sold a similar a few months ago.
This is a totally different New York.
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#8
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 317
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Bensonhurst is mostly Asian now. Some pockets of old Italians left, a few stores, watering holes and societies for older Italians to hang out remain. But mostly Chinese written and spoken in Bensonhurst now.
Ifcourse, the same thing is happening all over Queens.
BTW, FDR will be shut down in 2 years, to be replaced by an Yeshiva.
Ifcourse, the same thing is happening all over Queens.
BTW, FDR will be shut down in 2 years, to be replaced by an Yeshiva.
#10
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 716
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It all started about 20 years as an economic alternative to the rents in Manhattan and Brooklyn Heights. People wanted to live near the "L" line in Williamsburg which is minutes into the City. Then it spread from there.
The one neighborhood that never benefited from this is Red Hook because it was separated from the rest of Brooklyn by the BQE over 60 years. And now they are really suffering due to the hurricane.
The one neighborhood that never benefited from this is Red Hook because it was separated from the rest of Brooklyn by the BQE over 60 years. And now they are really suffering due to the hurricane.
#12
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 361
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East New York remains one of the roughest neighborhoods in Brooklyn (with the exception of Brownsville, its neighbor to the west, which has the largest concentration of public housing in the country, and has one of the highest poverty rates in the city.)
Bushwick, on the L train, is definitely trendy right now, a huge difference from the 80s when the neighborhood burned as the result of riots. More and more of the families from the DR and Puerto Rico are leaving the area, and the artists and the less wealthy young professionals are moving in. Rents are skyrocketing -- my rent increased 16% this year. Bed-Stuy and Crowne Heights are also changing a lot.
I love Brooklyn
Bushwick, on the L train, is definitely trendy right now, a huge difference from the 80s when the neighborhood burned as the result of riots. More and more of the families from the DR and Puerto Rico are leaving the area, and the artists and the less wealthy young professionals are moving in. Rents are skyrocketing -- my rent increased 16% this year. Bed-Stuy and Crowne Heights are also changing a lot.
I love Brooklyn
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