Calzone
Gear Whore #1
Interesting story Cal. Didn't know that your block was essentially new and indeed it is a miracle.
I have to keep up with my PhD friend to know when and how he is moving to NYC. He'll be at Columbia's housing for students so I guess upper East side.
I did leave that area unexplored but seems rather good. West good, sketchy East. Did NYC want to have a sort of Cold war setting with this arrangement?
Jorde,
Most of Columbia's students live on the Upper Westside.
In East Harlem (Spanish Harlem) 50% of the population receives some sort of government check, the poor are really concentrated, and 25% of the residents live in Public Housing. Public Housing lines all the avenues. One particularly bad spot is 125th and Lex where mucho drug rehab, halfway houses, and shelters are concentrated. Kinda reminds me of NYC in the 70's in a bad way.
Recently it is the anniversity of a cop killing that happened not far from where I live. Also know that my building kinda stands out being at the top of a hill, and because it is a new luxury building it really stands out as not fitting in the neighborhood. My building does not take up an entire block and is only eight stories, so for the 40 units the average is 5 apartments per floor.
One neighbor on 101st Street who is a long time resident told me that she avoids 106th Street just five blocks away, calling the people who live there "nasty." The more north one enters into SpaHa, the more dangerous and less civilized.
Anyways the poverty is kinda institutionalized. The local Post Office uses the official name of the neighborhood as "Hellgate." On the first of the month you want to avoid going to the Post Office because there is a line going out the door for Postal Money Orders. The community is so poor that people do not have checking accounts. Shamefully this is so Third World.
Cal