Dude, Where’s My Wine Bars?

Evil gentrifiers eating their organical foods. Photo from NYT review of NE Kingdom
José is at it again: bombast with little substance and scaremongery spluttering of downright lies. He’s getting quite repetitious, too: “We rebuilt up on our backs, and now it’s being sold to developers. We built this neighborhood, and now we have to fight for it.”
He’s conflating “neighborhood” and “community” — while the community may have been severely challenged and damaged in the wake of the fires and looting, and may indeed have been “rebuilt” in the decades since, the physical neighborhood is whatever was built up until the 1920s and then what was built by the city — almost no private development took place in Bushwick after the 70s until now. So if you’re gonna say anything physical was “rebuilt,” fine, but it wasn’t rebuilt on your backs — it was rebuilt on the wallets of the middle class, in places people from your “community” burned down.
José was quoted at two-million-dollar-a-year Make the Road by Walking’s latest high noon, weekday rally for affordable housing at the abominably hideous 358 Grove condominium, which drew the attention of the Brooklyn Downtown Star and City Limits. Two quotes from these two different publications caught my eye:
“A lot of the delis, Spanish restaurants, and panaderías are being replaced by fancy shops, organic shops, and Internet cafés,” said Lopez. “A lot of shops are shutting down, and the ones that are opening in their place don’t serve the current community, but the new one.”
and
“Where we used to have bodegas and rice and beans restaurants, we’re now seeing wine bars and luxury condos.”
One word sums up my reaction: no. Nowhere in Bushwick has a panadería gone out of business to reopen as an “organic shop.” Nowhere in Bushwick has a bodega closed to reopen as a “fancy shop.” Nowhere in Bushwick has a “Spanish [sic] restaurant” gone out of business to reopen as an “Internet café.” Every panadería with hot pink sugared pastries [sic, again], 99-cent store, and shitbag bodega I have ever seen is still in business, including the one that menaces and rips off the corner near my house, crowd of gangbangers and crackheads intact.
And trust me, if anyone would know about such things, it would be me or someone I know, and nobody can produce any evidence of such a trend thus far. There are simply too many storefronts that have been vacant for years that entrepreneurs are busy filling with still-too-few new amenities. Not to mention all the “old community”-serving shops that the “new community” patronizes. I see little market pressure upon older businesses to completely abandon their old customer base in favor of a few thousand people who don’t know what to do with a plantain — a variety of items can fit on store shelves, after all. In addition, I routinely see Puerto Ricans in the handful of nicer places in Bushwick — the word “organic” clearly doesn’t send shivers down their spines. Maybe this “community” of which José speaks isn’t as monolithic as he’d like us to believe, or at least isn’t willing to obey marching orders from official class-baiting organizations that claim to speak for it.
I do not deny that the trend José fears will happen in the near future, and it’s a distinct likelihood that he’s just gearing up his troops to, I don’t know, protest and picket a few of these “new community”-serving shops when they do show up. But right now, it’s all lies. And frankly, it just makes Bushwick look even more attractive to possible future residents. Hmm…just whom are you working for, José?







August 27th, 2007 at 6:57 pm
whew - my ears are ringin from all that. I have to say I’m with Jeremy on this one as far as retail is concerned.
why shouldn’t the retail base reflect the community? In that case, we should have at lease ONE coffeeshop/trendy retailer/organic market/fancy shop, per every TWENTY deli/tortilla factory/cell phone shop/church/99 cent stores. From what I can see, us trendoids are still very underrepresented retail-wise.
I’d say we’re at least 5 years away from even having a visible retail presence at all on the streets of Bushwick.
the locals would also benefit from a variety of stores I would think. Not every ten-plus-years resident, person of color in Bushwick is on foodstamps afterall. Still, I do think Northeast Kingdom charges a dollar too much for everything…
all that being said, as a renter, I definitely support rent stabilization and strong housing protections. So I support MTRBW in their work towards that aim. Yet again, that is something that can benefit more than just a presumed “targeted audience.”
I hate it that both sides of this argument seem to reflexively cast it along color lines.. UGH!
August 27th, 2007 at 7:12 pm
Lessee, in the 3 years we’ve lived here, exactly three new businesses have opened up in our immediate area: a Mexican produce market in a formerly vacant space, Black Bean Grill in a formerly vacant space, and a party supply store in what used to be a used furniture store.
Yay, gentrification!
August 27th, 2007 at 10:42 pm
José and his gang are every bit as racist as the black men who point at me and say that white motherfuckers are ruining the neighborhood. Only difference is, Jose’s savvy enough to spin his racism in a fashion that’ll sell to AM New York.
For all his class-baiting and his claims of being misquoted, he hasn’t ever taken back his “wine bar” comment, has he?
Convenient of José to ignore the fact that I can’t fucking afford a $270-K condo, and even if I could, I sure as hell wouldn’t buy one at the shithouse 358 Grove.
But when you’re 19, you don’t see nuance. You only see blood and testosterone. The elderly Puerto Rican lady who asked Jen this morning how I am, because she hasn’t seen me in a while–she doesn’t seem to agree with the teenyboppers that I’m such a menace.
August 27th, 2007 at 11:26 pm
Hi Jeremy,
I write to weigh in on the gentrification discussion. I have only posted once before–in response to Tony T’s thread about Hollywood and Bushwick. I reintroduce myself as an artist who owns and has partially renovated a vacant factory building in Bushwick for use as my studio. We are in the process of constructing a dental clinic on the ground floor of the building.
I feel that your take on gentrification reflects your position as someone who feels he has risked a lot to move to this neighborhood, to make an investment in his property, and to endure the distinct lack of amenities that characterize a poor community. It is hard for you to have patience with, or be sympathetic to, the notion that there might be hostility to you and me, when we just want to go about our business and live our lives in Bushwick, unburdened by how our decisions may affect others. Especially when this patch of contested turf seems less than ideal from our perspective, it is frustrating to be told that we are part of the problem. The neighborhood seems to have plenty of problems that don’t have anything to do with us!
That said, I think you are way too hard on those who fear for their future in Bushwick–the folks that MTRBW is trying to galvanize and to help. Where you stand on the prospect of newcomers like us moving into the neighborhood can be influenced by whether you own or rent. For example, one of my neighbors is a patriarch of Hispanic origin whose entire family of three generations lives in a 3-family house that he has owned since 1983. He has told me that he is thrilled that I have bought the building next to his, believing that it increases the value of his property, which he will be able to sell eventually for a big profit.
Property owners don’t fear gentrification, but the many more people who rent may well resent the newcomers as harbingers of displacement. The poor people in Bushwick know what’s coming. It may take 20 years, but it is inevitable. And they have little recourse against it. Look at Manhattan. The only people of limited income who can afford to live there are in government-subsidized housing. It wasn’t always so. The newcomers to Bushwick who don’t have the ability to buy their dwellings are going to be in the same position as the long-time, largely Hispanic, residents who rent. These newcomers have no protection against future displacement either once they help improve the neighborhood. Artists particluarly have watched neighborhood after neighborhood retreat from them into inaffordability. It’s the story of New York over the last 30 years.
Because you are fortunate, or prescient enough, to be able to afford and renovate your house, your should consider yourself lucky. Your situation is far better than those for whom you appear to have so little sympathy. They have far greater problems than whether they can get Thai food or a find a good wine bar in their neighborhood.
Let’s try to live together as best we can, knowing that we can’t always prevent ourselves from being the agents of harm to those around us. If the frustration of of poorer neighbors around us spills over at us, I think the better posture is to reserve judgment about them because some of us may well be in their shoes in the future.
August 28th, 2007 at 12:40 am
Zephyr, you made some very thoughtful comments, but my take on gentrification is not colored by my home ownership, as I have always felt exactly as I do now on the issue, years before I was able to own property.
The problem is that I simply don’t see how having to move because one’s rent goes up is a big deal. As I have mentioned elsewhere, it’s happened to me and several of my friends in another city. So you move. Big deal. When a product I buy at the store gets scarcer and therefore more expensive, I usually stop buying it or substitute something similar but cheaper. I don’t rail against the factors that make peaches rise from 25c a piece in late summer to $2 a piece in winter.
I know, housing is different — but is it? It’s a bigger pain to be priced out of than most other products because one lives in one’s home, but homes are a product, supplied like any other. And the fact is, there is a huge supply of cheap, available housing across the country just waiting to be filled. Houses in Flint, Michigan, for example, rent for $250 and sell for $9000. So what we’re talking about here is some people’s desire to continue to afford a luxury — residence in New York City. Pardon me if I am less than sympathetic.
All this said, my judgement of these types is based solely in their idiotic arguments and stances. If they were to focus on, say, increasing homeownership among their community instead of inciting class war over a couple of coffee shops and a big ugly condo, I would be all fuck-yeah behind them. But as it stands, they will only attract my criticism.
August 28th, 2007 at 7:54 am
Sorry if I lost my shit up there; I’m just annoyed and frustrated by the rhetoric that the Make the Road people like to flog and even more annoyed that no one outside this site is calling them on their wine-bar-and-fancy-restaurant bullshit.
If MTRBW were to announce that Danny Meyer was opening Maria Hernandez Grille on Suydam, I suspect the Daily News would just print it without calling him for comment.
August 28th, 2007 at 12:32 pm
I still dont understand how there can exist a legal way to stop people from moving into a neighborhood. Has it ever been successfully done before?
the bottom line is: I moved to a neighborhood which was the crime central of the entire world, and apparently the people here don’t want me.
. “Make the Road by Walking” should stop having meetings and start a blog to get its message out. Because the way it sends it message out is very important, for us current residents and the future ones. When I look at simple lies of “A lot of shops are shutting down, and the ones that are opening in their place don’t serve the current community” I get the feeling that Make The Road by Walking can -lie- to get what they want. That is a scary beginning. Change is inevitable and there must be other solutions then rejecting the newcomers. I read the articles and I have not seen a single solution from MTRBW that makes sense. Should people not move in? Should buildings not be built? Should the government intervene and built affordable housing all around Bushwick? Whatever “positive solutions” they offer, it has nothing to the with- the real estate brokers, developers, the current residents, future residents. This is between them and the city housing and that’s not the message I get seeing those people infront of that luxury highrise.
August 28th, 2007 at 12:37 pm
this whole previous post made me sound like some yuppie which I ain’t… when “gentrified bushwick arrives” I’ll probably be moving out with its current residents.
August 28th, 2007 at 1:24 pm
All issues of gentrification aside, and as someone who was just priced out of an apartment in June, moving is an inconvenience (frankly, it sucks big time) but there’s a big difference between having to move when you’re single and young(ish) and when you’re settled with a family, whether it’s across town or across country. Houses may rent for $250 in Flint but can a parent find a job there that affords their family stability during such a big transition (or at all)? On a developmental psychology level, kids benefit from familiarity like friends and a steady home. In general, it’s a lot harder to disconnect yourself from a place you’ve lived in for decades than just a few years. That goes for knowing how to find a better paying job, going through the process of finding new friends, and getting situated in a new area/community.
A mere insight. Staying in NYC for the next 10 years could turn out to be equally or more damaging to a low- or average-income family for all I know. I have no interest in flamebaiting another income/government-subsidies-I’ll-never-see debate.
August 28th, 2007 at 7:42 pm
Ando, thank you for the sane comment. I don’t doubt that it’s hard to move under the circumstances many in Bushwick find themselves, and I am sympathetic, to a degree. I just think it’s ridiculous that it’s treated almost like genocide.
August 29th, 2007 at 3:11 pm
Hmmm. From the lead-in to the Jose quote you have above…
“As the demographics of Bushwick changes, more upscale coffee shops, restaurants, and grocery stores are moving in to serve the wealthier residents, often replacing the bodegas and discount grocery stores that have served the community for years.”
Let me guess. Neither the ‘reporter’ nor the paper thought it wise to actually, uhhh, do any of their own fucking research?? Shoddy bullshit.
Jose, if you are lurking I want you to tell us where exactly these establishments are, and what they replaced. So we can go and enjoy them!
We all know about NE Kingdom. It’s been around for a few years and didn’t replace a god damned thing. We know about Life Cafe, the oldest ‘gentrifying establishment’ in the area, also replacing what? An empty storefront on Flushing? The coffee shop down the way from NE Kingdom, fine. But it’s tiny, unnoticed and again, replaced a lovely crapped out never been used in years mini storefront.
What I really want to know about: these supposed fancy shops, organic shops, and Internet cafés. Where, where and WHERE? Replacing exactly what, what and WHAT?
Please do yourself a favor and provide data for your assertions, or else I will not take anything else you have to say seriously. And that’s a really bad thing, cuz for the most part I want to support what you are doing.
October 9th, 2007 at 11:51 am
[…] as in-tune with demographic trends as I thought. Unless they’re way underground with those wine bar plans. We’ll see what becomes of the Northeast Kingdom […]
November 16th, 2007 at 11:14 am
[…] not finished filling up and building out. But gentrification is not a phenomenon which will plant a wine bar on every corner from Woodlawn to Rockaway. So knock it off with the […]