National links: Rethinking migration and gentrification patterns

DC’s recently opened, gas-station and beer garden themed Asland Beer Company in the foreground of a bulding crane in July of 2022 by Ted Eytan licensed under Creative Commons.

Why the story we tell ourselves about gentrification is too basic. The history of Phoenix’s ancient canal system. New data on Black migration in and around metro areas.

Why the story we tell ourselves about gentrification is too simple: Author and researcher Leslie Kern wonders in her opinion piece if we’re hitting the wrong targets in discussions about gentrification. She argues that hipsters and pour-over coffee are symptoms of a larger problem with the capitalist instincts of multi-national real estate companies that change neighborhoods over time. (Leslie Kern | The Guardian)

The history of Phoenix’s ancient canal system: The valley in which the City of Phoenix sits now was once the domain of the Hohokam civilization. Between 100 and 1450 AD, they built a series of canals to funnel just seven inches of rain annually to 100,000 acres of farmland. The amount of collective work that it took to keep up 180 miles of canals in an arid region is quite amazing. (Keridwen Cornelius | BBC Travel)

New data on Black migration in and around metro areas: Over the last 50 years, the Black population in the 40 largest cities has gone from 40% to 24%. While some might believe gentrification is playing a role, that story doesn’t seem to work out in the data. The change has many different possible stories, including the suburbanization of jobs and population but as high and middle-income Black families were able to leave, lower-income families were not. (Jerusalem Demsas | The Atlantic)

More bike lanes for Boston: Boston Mayor Michelle Wu announced plans yesterday to expand the city’s bike lane network such that 50% of the city’s population would be within a 3-minute walk of the network when finished. That would include 9.4 miles of new bike lanes including contraflow lanes on some neighborhood one-way streets. The plan also includes 100 more bike share stations and 75 new raised crosswalks. (Christian MilNeil and Grecia White | Streetsblog Mass)

The future of downtown Denver: Denver’s downtown has been hit especially hard by the pandemic, but many of the problems started before including vacant storefronts and increasing levels of homelessness. Now city leaders are imagining solutions in order to bring back 100,000 workers through improvements to the 16th Street Mall, office spaces, and nightlife. (Daliah Singer | 5280 Magazine)

Quote of the Week

“Transportation mobility is fundamental to economic mobility. Low-wage workers commonly occupy entry-level positions where they must commute to work. But their commutes are fragile — one missed bus, one flat bicycle tire, or one deferred car repair can easily spell job loss…again. Transportation insecurity traps them in a game of Chutes and Ladders in which there are only chutes.”

Karina Ricks discussing transportation insecurity and what it will take to get to universal basic mobility.

This week on the podcast, Nolan Gray talks about his new book, “Arbitrary Lines: How Zoning Broke the American City and How to Fix It.”