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actually implement their own eforts to improve the streetscape. These approaches require
Council Ofce support and buy-in, but beyond that, are driven by the innovatve research of city
agencies like the LADOT, or by community members themselves (with the assistance of the York
Boulevard Improvement Vision and Acton Plan).
This presents a complicated and dependant relatonship for urban transformaton:
without Council Ofce support, city departments would not be at liberty to break with status
quo policies or procedures. Changing basic ways of doing things in the city bureaucratc
structure is long, drawn out, and easily defeated. City agencies must rely on Council Motons
to adopt innovaton. On the other hand, neither the Council members, nor the community can
create any lastng efects without the complete dedicaton of the executng city departments.
Many potental improvement projects require the collaboraton of multple city departments
in their executon, which prescribes inter-departmental dialog. City departments that may be
unfamiliar with innovaton may present challenges or roadblocks to the process, and hence the
need for the leadership of Council members, or beter, the Mayor. The implied cooperaton
between elected ofcials and city employees is at the core of urban innovaton, all ted together
in their applicaton with the will and social capital of a neighborhoods consttuents.
The Council Ofce has made public gestures to support community-led revitalizaton,
which can be seen as an efort to avoid liability or maintenance for improvements, or alternately
as a new directon for neighborhood transformaton, primarily led by stakeholder organizing and
then rubber-stamped by the city authorites. A resident recalls that initally, when the Council
Ofce atempted to engage the community, there was a whole group of people showing up
who had been actve in the community before and had grown really disenchanted with the
process. They were really negatve (Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013). As
discussed in the literature theory, disillusionment with city support is a common challenge to
outreach eforts.
Rather than make false promises, the city appears to be taking a new path,
acknowledging its inability to achieve and more clearly statng its limitatons (and thereby
117
establishing realistc expectatons). In the case of Yorks parklet, the community partner is
required to take on all costs and burdens including constructon, liability, and maintenance
the primary functon of the city was stewardship and the permitng. This could be perceived
as being unfair to the community partner, but provides an important soluton to the citys
fnancial and stafng reductons. Overburdened city staf have litle tme to spearhead
community improvement projects with the eliminaton of redevelopment, it seems like this
community-led strategy may emerge as the new means to revitalizaton. Cancian notes that,
Theres a natural community of interest between urban guerilla immediate design and elected
ofcials,(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013) where the swif and low cost
implementaton of projects like the parklet appear as immediate accomplishments for those
elected (accomplishments that come at minimal cost to the city, council district, or the general
pot of taxpayer dollars).
The fact that Councilman Huizar listened to the planner who advised him to make a
non-traditonal guide to improvement instead of a master plan, solidifes the positon that
the Council Ofce desires to defer to the community, whether out of budgetary necessity or
ideals of community agency. In a way, the Councilman has provided a longer term soluton for
revitalizaton planning when there is a change of the Districts administraton or representaton,
it will be more important for the community to have a how-to guide, rather than a plan that
could be easily pushed aside (Z. Loera, personal communicaton, November 29, 2012).
How city interventon shapes community. Minimal eforts from the city however
can have dynamic impacts on a neighborhood. In Yorks case, small things like the bike corral,
parklet, or bike lanes have contributed signifcantly to the streets identty as an alternatve
transit-friendly corridor (see quote in Figure 73.).
The Council Ofce can also set the precedent for outreach and community engagement,
which greatly infuences the end product of revitalizaton eforts. The revitalizaton eforts on
York have consciously made eforts to include the diverse voices of businesses, residents, and
the Neighborhood Council, making sure that bilingual outreach was taking place (R. Lehman,
118
Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013).
Physical Determinism Versus Cultural Determinism
A key fnding in the research is that the physical and the cultural are closely linked and
interdependent, with physical aspects of York actng as the largest infuence on the boulevards
success. But does this physical space determine the ends of York? Physical space on York has
been competed over through transportaton modes, business types, income brackets, public
space amenites, housing tenure, age, ethnicity, and more. The physical porton on York that is
under dramatc transformaton is very small in comparison to the larger corridor, and therefore
can only speak to the site-specifc phenomena. At the same tme, it is evident that these
site-specifc phenomena have infuenced larger cultural shifs, through a zeitgeist of actve
transportaton and citywide policy shifs towards open space and public rights of way (see quote
Figure 73. Stakeholder quotes about the bike corral
and parklet.
Getting a bike corral does
really count, those things are
very encouraging(J. Graham,
personal communication,
January 29, 2013)
The parklet is a good example
of [community outreach]
Before the opening when they
announced that the city was
going to commit to building
it. There was an event here
with a proposal and artist
rendering of what it would
look like all the people that
were part of the planning
process spoke, and there was
Latino representation there,
even monolingual Spanish
speaking representation. (H.
Huezo, personal communication,
March 2, 2013)]
personal communicaton, February 21,
2013) (see quote in Figure 73.). Multple
stakeholders cited the productve
relatonship between the Neighborhood
Council and Council Ofce, a partnership
between community steward and city
implementaton.
Among all the impacts that the
city could make in neighborhoods, one
that presents considerable challenge is
the invigoraton of old or failing small
businesses. It became clear in the research
that the Council Ofce can ofer support
to businesses, but cannot necessarily
bridge the cultural divide between new
businesses and older establishments (M.
119
Theres a lot of stuf in the
air. People are realizing
that changing public space
and reducing our dependence
on cars has so many benefts
for the community and our
health on so many levels
It was a really good time
to experiment. (Resident
1, personal communication,
January 27, 2013)
The key to maintaining a
sweet spot is in places like
the parklet, that open up
and welcome many diferent
kinds of people, and you
dont necessarily have to buy
things. The key is also doing
something to ensure that local
businesses are still able to
open here. (M. Housseinzadeh,
personal communication,
February 7, 2013)
Figure 74. Stakeholder quotes about Yorks zeitgeist.
in Figure 74.).
The physical-cultural balance of
York is in the process of being sorted, but
much of its outcome will be based in the
values and practces of its users. It is clear
when analyzing interview themes that
broadly, the physicality and afordability
of the neighborhood is directly ted to its
sense of identty (see quote in Figure 74.).
Without the nexus of physical aspects
and afordability, York will quickly loose
its identty, character, and uniqueness.
Therefore, the stewardship of users
completes a social contract that dictates
the culture of the space. This forms the
community trust and enculturaton that
Harrison and Dourish (1996) refer to when
they talk about place and the nature of placemaking: the stronger the community contract of
the occupants, the safer a place is from loosing its identty.
Identty and Placemaking Mechanisms
York embodies many esoteric or disparate aspects of the contemporary Los Angeles
identty and serves as a great model for the placemaking that can result from recent cultural
shifs. York provides a unique environment that fosters creatve endeavors, actve transport,
localism, and quality of life. These are all important values that factor into how we should shape
our city for the future. By allowing York to express itself through the implementaton of bike
lanes, the allowance of the art walk, through a parklet, the city has scratched the surface of a
rich strategy for placemaking and community identty formaton.
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Since York embodies many drivers of revitalizaton, it captures the interacton of
factors required to understand why a community revives. At the center of the Model for Yorks
Revitalizaton (see Figure 72.) is engagement and support for diverse socio-economic groups
through physical or social services. Translated to everday life, this means free public events
and services, which include bike lanes, public open space like parklets, art walks and other
sanctoned public cultural events like festvals, and community educaton and empowerment as
seen in Neighborhood Councils.
The most poignant account of this dynamism was relayed in a descripton of a
community bike ride: There was something called the Art Ride they would get a group of
people together who wanted to go on a nightme ride, and they would stop at galleries in
succession along Figueroa, [York], Colorado Boulevard, Eagle Rock Boulevard, and at tmes, on a
good summer night when the weather was great, there could be a hundred people on a bicycle
ride. They would end up here all at one tme. To me it was very dynamic, cause theyd park
their bicycles out front, theyd march into the building, theyd suck up every piece of liquid that
was available, theyd use the restroom. It was great it was just one of those fushes that came
through that was a litle excitement [They were] not necessarily a trafc interrupton but
people would have to go slow, because this corner happened to be a nucleus for a lot of people
moving back and forth. There started to be some food trucks that showed up, so that was that
situaton. (C. Graham, personal communicaton, April 30, 2013)
This trafc calming, cultural, actve transit moment of community engagement is
precisely the type of dynamic phenomena what has revived York Boulevard, and clearly, it has
litle to do with the standard methods utlized in urban planning to efect neighborhood change.
Events like this necessitated the city-sanctoned infrastructures of support. Yorks resultng
revitalizaton and sense of place therefore comes directly from the energy of people, the
zeitgeist of everyday users.
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CHAPTER 6
CONCLUSIONS
Summary
York Boulevard provides valuable and widely applicable lessons for community and
economic vitality in Los Angeles corridors, especially in the current urban planning environment
where the Community Redevelopment Agencies have been disbanded. This study sought to
distll the key features that have infuenced York to become a vibrant corridor over the last four
years whether it was the creatve cultural infuence, afordability prescribed by the economic
downturn, a transportaton restructuring of the street, or the boulevards physical scale and
context.
Afer much research into the mechanisms that drive neighborhood and corridor
revitalizaton, the study of York Boulevard has confrmed and expanded on the theories ofered
in previous literature. Street-oriented revitalizaton and the physicality of a space have emerged
as predominant themes, closely followed by cultural zeitgeist and the adherent support from
those regulatng the built environment: the city. The theories outlined in Jacobs (1961) text,
The Death and Life of Great American Cites, have emerged as the most confrmed mechanisms
of neighborhood vitality found in the study. Other theories that were confrmed were those
of placemaking (Harrison and Dourish, 1996; Markusen, 2010) and cultural-politcal hegemony
(McCann, 2002; Lepofsky and Fraser, 2003).
The study of York provided rich data on the mechanisms of change, something that was
only available through an oral history of place. The qualitatve approach of the semi-structured
interviews combined with contextualizing research to provide insight into issues that are rarely
captured or analyzed in planning research. The desire in any discipline to simplify and condense
concepts may be ideal for branding strategies, but for understanding why things work the way
they do, and understanding why a strategy is necessary, requires this slow and subtle method.
As discussed in the previous chapter, the mechanisms that infuence revitalizaton
exist in a delicate balance, that when tpped, can result in unwanted efects. Understanding
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the components that create stability and perpetuate vitality into the future, then, should be a
major focus of revitalizaton research. The study of York Boulevard found that cultural producers
who provide public engagement through free events are the best stewards of neighborhood
placemaking and identty formaton. These stakeholders hold some of the greatest power to
shape the future of a neighborhood. In this, cultural producers should acknowledge their role in
neighborhood change and engage thoughtully in their endeavors in a community.
The volatlity perceived on York points out a dissonance in the revitalizaton process.
Issues associated with Yorks improvement like gentrifcaton and displacement provide thorough
evidence that stability in revitalizaton is at odds with the desire to revitalize. Many stakeholders
voice concern that improving quality of life and space ofen precedes displacement, and this,
labeled by stakeholders under the broad term, gentrifcaton, is an issue that is unresolved
in the study. Cancian, who made the York Boulevard Improvement Vision and Acton Plan,
points out that, its very countercultural to atempt to intentonally lower value of property
in this country, but that is what this is about. You dont catch a lot of elected ofcials saying I
guarantee that I will lower the value of your property (S. Cancian, personal communicaton,
February 14, 2013). However, making a neighborhood afordable and keeping the value of
property low are synonymous, and those concerned about gentrifcaton should think hard
about the resolvable aspects of this relatonship.
The most valuable porton of this research was establishing aspects necessary for the
neighborhood revitalizaton process to retain residents. At the tme this study was completed,
York remains in the sweet spot on the edge of displacement, and therefore provides
insight into strategies to keep the improvements available for those that currently live in the
neighborhood and frequent the corridor.
Conclusion
Refectng on the long-form history of Highland Park, it seems like people are choosing
to locate in the area for much the same reasons they were over a hundred years ago the
natural setng among open green space, the close proximity to central Los Angeles, the liberal
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and artstc traditons, and inexpensive
property and housing stock. To put it simply:
Highland Park embodies a high quality of
life at an afordable price (see quote in
Figure 75.).
Harrison and Dourish (1996)
illustrate that the dynamic between
[living in Highland Park]
felt like you could live in
the country and yet there it
was, the metropolis, 5 minutes
away. (T. Ward, personal
communication, February 12,
2013)
space and place is dictated by culture, but this studys fndings suggest that if there is not
an appropriate space that cultvates the development of culture, placemaking may be a lost
batle (see Figure 50. Model for Yorks Revitalizaton). Yorks ability to develop a sense of place,
especially in terms of its physical character and the social and cultural environments it fosters, is
a wonderful additon to the academic discussion of placemaking.
One aspect of Yorks physicality that cannot be ignored is its historic physical build out
and identty as the end of the trolley line. The porton of York that has revitalized with the
mechanisms described in this study is built in its current form based on its historic use as a
pedestrian-scale shopping area where people would run their errands and then, re-board the
train. Essentally, York provides a case study of an historical transit-oriented development.
This is a signifcant fnding because it provides evidence that corridor vitality is
embedded in accessibility and mobility, partcularly mobility at the human scale. Shopping,
especially the act of capturing local dollars, is an actvity that drives economic development, and
this is a phenomenon that cannot be accomplished from a car. The idea that someone would go
Figure 75. Quote about Highland Parks duality of
place.
Theres a very pedestrian and
bicycle conscious movement
which Im very happy about
Its the LA dream, to walk to
work. (J. Graham, personal
communication, January 29,
2013)
Figure 76. Quote about LA walking.
shopping at multple businesses a concept
at the basis of an economic corridor
can only be achieved if that person has
the ability to wander by foot or bicycle.
In the 80s and 90s, shopping at the
pedestrian scale occurred in malls. Todays
124
generatonal zeitgeist requires a more savvy cultural engagement from destnatons (see quote
in Figure 76.), and York is exactly the kind of place that provides this mixed cultural-recreatonal
experience.
York Boulevard provides visual legibility, low speed vehicles, short blocks, small
storefronts, cross-street verbal proximity, and accessibility through mult-modal amenites, as
well as a variety of new uses that ensure its populaton day and night. The quality of Yorks
environment the basic aspect of on-street safety is hugely infuental on users. The street feels
safe and is selected by new users precisely for these factors (see Figure 77.).
On York, recently relocated small business owners and residents alike act as both
consumers and investors, agglomeratng around an existng cultural cache. The city has acted
as a facilitator for change, fostering a street environment more conducive to pedestrians,
bikers, and families. All are taking advantage of social connectvity established by the winning
built environment: one where visual and aural communicaton is assured by the scale of the
street. Without this street environment-established connectvity, it would be impossible for the
Figure 77. An early comment on a local blog touches on the auspicious pedestrian scale of York.
125
neighborhood to achieve such swif and dynamic change.
The only caveat to Yorks dream revitalizaton scenario is the necessity of afordability.
Evident in the Model for Yorks Revitalizaton (see Figure 50.), without afordability the nexus
of revitalizaton falls apart. The preservaton of afordability should therefore be seriously
considered as a tenant in all revitalizaton policy and eforts.
Limitatons of the Study
A basic limitaton of the study was that it was conducted entrely in English. Though
community representatves that engage the local monolingual Spanish-speaking populaton
were interviewed, a further study that primarily targets the Latno populaton would be well
warranted. Because the study only interviewed the English speaking populaton, the cultural
practces emphasized are those of that populaton. For instance, though there are bike lanes
provided for bicycle users, many Latno residents were observed stll bicycling on the sidewalks,
indicatng a failure to bridge the cultural gap among cyclists. Understanding why this has
happened could only be discovered through further qualitatve research.
Other limitatons include the tme scale of change. Due to data availability, economic,
demographic, and transportaton data accessible for York is only available through 2010-2011.
Because the changes on York are so recent, it is hard to quantfy this data with such a short
period of observaton. Especially in the case of street safety and collision data, an ideal data
set would consist of 7-10 years of implementaton of bike lanes or road diet, not the 1-2 years
available. Likewise with shifing demographics and the local economy, it is too early to observe
real change in the period of tme available.
Both a limitaton and an asset, Yorks context as a site that has been targeted by the
city as a test for progressive projects (including many Complete Streets applicatons), makes
it a special case, one that may be privileged in terms of ease or support of revitalizaton
mechanisms. The study however does indicate cultural producers as primary initators of
change, and these fgures can be found in a wide variety of contexts. The noton that the city
and businesses piggyback on culture illustrates that the special case of this site selecton may
126
not be as big a factor in the overall dynamic of revitalizaton.
York may also be a special case because it is in Northeast LA, a very unique and isolated
neighborhood of Los Angeles. Northeast LA exists as a small valley isolated by two neighboring
cites (Pasadena and Glendale), a mountain range, and the LA River. This may serve as a privilege
in regards to neighborhood incubaton, but also prevents accessibility. This physical situaton in
the region may skew results, limitng a wider applicaton of the fndings.
Policy Implicatons
The three realms of policy identfed as establishing the basis for Yorks revitalizaton (see
Figure 48. Why York Boulevard Works diagram) are:
Afordability
Cultural vibrance and diversity
Social connectvity
The diagram illustratng Yorks mechanisms has been synthesized to create a policy
model that feshes out these aspects and their relatonships in real world applicatons (see
Figure 78.). The studys fndings imply that the dialog about revitalizaton should be guided by
these tenants: to create and sustain revitalizaton, support for cultural vibrance and diversity
should be maintained through social connectvity, and this connectvity needs to be accessible to
all via afordability.
As discussed in the Conclusion, social connectvity is very related to both cultural
producers and the physical environment of the street. Policy should support cultural producton
and engagement, which can be accomplished both through support of cultural insttutons, as
well as through supportng free public events and amenites.
Hugely successful events that exemplify todays cultural landscape have been borne
out of previously unaccepted and criminalized cultural-street practces one example being
Ciclavia, where a route of the citys streets is closed to vehicles and opened exclusively to cyclists
and pedestrians for a limited amount of tme. Though Ciclavia has been introduced in popular
memory as a copy of an event in South America, Ciclavias American roots lie in Critcal Mass
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rides, a natonally practced monthly bicycle ride, where cyclists shut down a street route from
vehicle usage due to their critcal mass. Critcal Mass rides have been notoriously persecuted
by the police, with many rides ending in the arrest of bicyclists for obstructng trafc. If only
authorites had realized the policy benefts of allowing such cultural events to occur
Case in point, the benefts of supportng alternatve culture can have huge impacts on
economic development and revitalizaton. Cites should seek out partnerships with cultural
producers when looking to create revitalizaton: theres no need to reinvent the wheel as
evidenced in the study of York, businesses and elected ofcials are merely piggybacking on
existng cultural capital. In the case of York, by providing bike lanes and corrals for bicycle
parking, York facilitates a natural cultural phenomenon, sanctoning existng cultural practces in
the physical environment through policy regulaton (see quote in Figure 79.). This study confrms
that on the street, the same strategies that accomplish Complete Streets beneft pedestrian/
public safety and initate and bolster economic development (Loukaitou-Sideris, 2000;
McCormick, 2012; Sadik-Khan, 2013).
Moving on to the physical street environment, one way to address corridor revitalizaton
introduced by the study is to look at remnant physical structures and identfy historical transit- or
mobility-oriented spaces. Many of the remnant street confguratons that dominate Los Angeles
streets are inefcient and dangerous and can serve as opportunites for safety modifcatons or
roadway re-purposing.
Policy approaches to corridor revitalizaton should include a broad reassessment of the
The bigger picture is that
this is a representation
of the value system of the
community, where were not
going to prioritize concrete
over a place to sit and gather
with your kids. (H. Huezo,
personal communication, March
2, 2013)
Figure 79. Stakeholder quote about community
values.
mobility landscape in Los Angeles as well as
prescriptve physical strategies to change
street confguratons that provide increased
accessibility and safety to human-scale
forms of transit, like walking and bicycling.
By undertaking a Complete Streets Master
Plan, cites can ensure a future suited to
129
contemporary economic, social, and safety needs.
Complete Streets are celebrated as an economic and cultural development engine. Their
implementaton across Los Angeles would tap into the contemporary zeitgeist of sustainability,
localism, public space, and alternate modes of transportaton. The social elements of road
confguratons are well documented in planning literature, and any Master Plan or physical
design oriented towards pedestrians has the potental to infuence neighborhood revitalizaton
with reverberatng efects (Currid, 2009; Jacobs, 1961; Markusen, 2010; Sadik-Khan, 2013;
Suton, 2010).
Low cost Complete Streets strategies include road diets, crosswalk striping, tactcal
reclamaton of streets for public space like parklets or plazas, and low water streetscape
improvements. Tactcal improvements can create a progressive culture in local residents and
businesses, showcasing immediate environmental transformaton. The relatvely low cost and
temporary nature of these interventons guarantee that they are easily reversible.
One approach to a Complete Streets Master Plan is a detailed and overlapping
analysis of under-utlized roadway, identfying streets most in need of safety modifcatons and
establishing a phased plan for implementaton that works cooperatvely with the Safe Routes to
School Master Plan, the Bicycle Master Plan, and mass-transit road prioritzaton for busses.
For permanence, all revitalizaton eforts require support from the top: a leadership-
driven approach is the most efectve means of undertaking city-wide policy-scale change in the
physical environment. By adoptng a Master Plan for Complete Streets and overhauling the citys
policies and procedures, city agencies will have the directve, incentve, and approval to move
ahead with policies that may otherwise be impossible to implement.
Beyond the leadership vision of Complete Streets, community organizing is a key
driver for the implementaton of streetscape modifcatons. An additonal efort to organize
neighborhood plans can discover the community vision while gathering the social capital
necessary to make signifcant changes to entre neighborhoods.
130
Follow-up Research and Suggestons for Future Investgaton
Follow-up Research
As mentoned in the Limitatons of the Study, further research needs to be done into
the quanttatve economic data of Yorks businesses and demographic shif. That study should
be undertaken no sooner than fve years from the implementaton of Yorks bike lanes in 2010,
which also marks the onset of the rapid pace of neighborhood change.
Further Investgaton
As a case study, York provides many aspects that warrant further investgaton. The
following are topics that could be pursued in future studies.
A study of York from the perspectve of Latno Urbanism would be a fascinatng
comparison to Yorks revitalizaton, especially looking into the transitonal relatonship between
aesthetcs of graft, signage, and neighborhood character (see Figure 80.).
Research into the mechanisms of cultural vitality of Highland Park by exploring the
persistence of artsts in the area over the span of the last century.
An exploraton of economic development tools that could be used to bridge
generatonal gaps in local business.
A survey of cultural producton tools that could inform a revitalizaton toolkit.
More research into the economic development benefts of pedestrian- and bicycle-
friendly business districts.
Figure 80. Highland Park would be a wonderful candidate for a study about Latno Urbanism.
131
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Revisitng Rental Housing. Washington DC: Brookings Insttute.
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137
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factinder2.census.gov/
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redevelopment-20120101
138
APPENDIX A
Defnitons of Terms
Creatve Placemaking: a situaton where partners from public, private, non-proft, and
community sectors strategically shape the physical and social character of a neighborhood,
town, city, or region around arts and cultural actvites. Creatve placemaking animates public
and private spaces, rejuvenates structures and streetscapes, improves local business viability
and public safety, and brings diverse people together to celebrate, inspire, and be inspired
(Markusen, 2010).
Artwalk: normally held at a regular tme, sometmes monthly, sometmes semi-annually, artwalks
are community organized events where galleries, artst studios, and businesses open late and
welcome the public into their space in an unstructured walking tour of the area.
Complete Streets and Living Streets: Complete Streets are designed and operated to enable
safe, and comfortable access and travel for users of all ages and abilites, including pedestrians,
bicyclists, motorists and public transport (County of Los Angeles, 2011). Living Streets include all
complete streets criteria, but also connote the additon of green infrastructure features, tactcal
interventons, cultural vitality, etc.
Parklet: a repurposing of parking roadway or red curb for a temporary sidewalk extension that
provides amenites like seatng, landscaping, bike parking, art, or exercise equipment (LADOT,
2013).
139
APPENDIX A
Defnitons of Terms
Social Capital: the expected collectve or economic benefts derived from the preferental
treatment and cooperaton between individuals and groups. Social contracts afect the
producton of individuals and groups and therefore, social capital embodies the idea that social
networks have value (Putnam, 2000).
Creatve Class: a socio-economic class coined by the economist Richard Florida made up of the
super creatve core: innovatve creators of commercial products and consumer goods including
occupatons ranging from science to educaton, and creatve professionals: knowledge-based
workers who draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specifc problems using higher
degrees of educaton to do so (Florida, 2002).
140
APPENDIX B
IRB Approval Leter
141
APPENDIX C
Sample Interview Questons
Residents/Users
Are you a local resident?
- (if yes) For how long?
Did you grow up in LA?
- (if yes) Where?
Why did you locate your home here? Do you own?
- If you do not live here, why do you come here? Would you consider moving here?
Can you tell me the story of how you discovered this neighborhood?
Do you feel camaraderie in the neighborhood?
- What do you perceive as the alliances and interest groups in your neighborhood?
- Do you see these groups as sharing the same values?
Do you support the citys eforts on York Bl? (Street Porch, Bike lanes)
- What about the art walk?
Do you know the neighborhoods history?
- Do you consider that history important?
- Do you feel diferently today about this neighborhood than you did a few years ago?
What are the factors you perceive as revitalizing the neighborhood?
- What directon do you think this street is headed in?
- What does Highland Park look like in the future?
142
APPENDIX C
Sample Interview Questons
Business Owners
How long have you had your business on York Bl?
Are you a local resident?
- (if yes) For how long?
Did you grow up in LA?
- (if yes) Where?
Why did you locate your business here?
Can you tell me the story of your choice to live/establish your self or business in this
neighborhood?
Do you feel camaraderie in the neighborhood?
- What do you perceive as the alliances and interest groups in your neighborhood?
- Do you see these groups as sharing the same values?
Have you considered establishing a merchant associaton? If it existed would you join? Do you
know about the proposed BID on York Bl. Would you support establishing a BID?
- How does your business ft in with the other businesses on York?
- Do you perceive camaraderie with older businesses?
What other factors on York do you perceive as efectng the success or vitality of your business?
Do you know the neighborhoods history?
- Do you consider that history important?
What are the factors you perceive as revitalizing the neighborhood?
- What directon do you think this street is headed in?
- What does Highland Park look like in the future?
143
APPENDIX D
Consent Form
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
Informed Consent Form for Research Involving Human Subjects
You are being invited to participate in a research study, which the Cal Poly Pomona
Institutional Review Board (IRB) has reviewed and approved for conduct by the
investigators named here. This form is designed to provide you - as a human subject -
with information about this study. The Investigator or his/her representative will describe
this study to you and answer any of your questions. You are entitled to an Experimental
Research Subjects Bill of Rights and a copy of this form. If you have any questions
about your rights as a subject, complaints about the informed consent process of this
research study, or experience an adverse event (something goes wrong), please
contact the Compliance Office within Cal Poly Pomonas Office of Research at (909)
869-4215. More information is available at the IRB website,
www.csupomona.edu/research/irb.
Project Title: Highland Park Next Generation: Reviving Street Culture in Northeast LA
Principal Investigator: Elizabeth Gallardo
Advisor: Dr. Gwendolyn Urey
IRP Protocol Number: #12-115
Description of the Research Project & its Use:
This study involves research into the factors that influence street revitalization and the
motivators that encourage community-driven place-making. In order to understand
this process, interviews are being conducted with local stakeholders (including small
business owners, residents, politicians, and other stakeholders engaged in the
community) in order to create a descriptive narrative of Highland Parks history through
the voice of the community. The interviews will help to identify those factors that most
positively affected the streets development. The interviews will provide insight of the
first hand experience and perceptions of the community.
Your participation in this study will help to provide a valuable case study for
neighborhood revitalization. This year the state of California made all community
redevelopment agencies illegal. The future of redevelopment remains to be seen, but
we can deduce that the system of community revitalization will need to fundamentally
change. In looking at a neighborhood that has largely revitalized and reorganized
motivated by community and stakeholder will, we can begin to see useful factors in
community improvement that can lead future efforts to make neighborhoods better.
Your statements might serve as the basis for developing recommendations to revise
and improve community revitalization tactics.
Interview Questions & Research Procedures:
You will be asked open-ended questions regarding your experience of the
neighborhood and how it has changed. Questions might also involve the specific
aspects of your business or use of Highland Park or your personal involvement in
community organizing. You might also be asked to recommend other local
stakeholders who you think would have useful insight into Highland Parks revitalization.
The interview will take less than an hour. Your participation in this study is completely
voluntary. While I do not anticipate that you will have any discomfort or other negative
144
feelings during the interview, such sentiments are possible. If this should happen (or for
any other reason) you are free to decline to answer any question. In addition, you are
free to withdraw from the entire research study at any time.
If you consent, your response will be audio-recorded. Upon completion of the interview
you will be asked to sign a release that will give you options instructing how you would
like your interview to be used in this study. These options will provide you with different
levels of confidentiality and the ways in which you authorize your interview to be used.
The interview mp3 files and computer transcriptions will be kept in a locked safe in the
researchers office. The computer files will be password protected and the computer
will be only used in a secured location. Upon the conclusion of the research project,
the tapes and transcriptions will be destroyed, unless you have authorized otherwise.
This research would be submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the
Masters Degree in Urban and Regional Planning. Upon completion of the research, the
researcher will publish the findings of this research in the thesis document, which will be
available in the Cal Poly Pomona library. In addition, articles or summaries of the
findings could be published in journals or newsletters concerning neighborhood
revitalization and case studies. Your responses to the questions may provide insights in
their original, non-aggregated form. Therefore, the researcher may seek your permission
to include quotes in the report's narrative that are directly attributable to you from
portions of the transcript. You will authorize this usage in the release form you will fill out
upon completion of this interview.
The consent and release form will be kept in a locked safe in researchers office
separate from subject data for a period of five years.
Confidentiality & Risks:
This study will entail conducting interviews with a small sample (i.e., 30-50) of local
stakeholders regarding the revitalization of Highland Park. As your comments are likely
to be related to your business or role in the community, individuals outside of the study
may be able to attribute your comments to you even if you are not named as the
source in any comments. Hence, you should be aware that the confidentiality of your
comments cannot be assured, unless you opt for an off the record interview. There
might be a risk of reprisal and criticism from community members, fellow business
owners, or other stakeholders for opinions expressed in the interview.
The study might involve interpreting the meanings of what is being seen and heard,
reflection and integration of the information which would provide a basis for evaluation
of the revitalization of Highland Park from various standpoints. It is your right to disclose
or not disclose any obstacles or challenges perceived in the revitalization process. In
framing your answers, please consider that your statements might be attributed to
yourself.
Should you have any further questions, please feel free to contact the studys principle
investigator, Elizabeth Gallardo, a graduate student in Urban and Regional Planning.
Her phone number is (323) 202-3701, and her e-mail address is
elizabethannegallardo@gmail.com. You may also contact her thesis committee chair,
APPENDIX D
Consent Form
145
Dr. Gwendolyn Urey, a professor in the Urban and Regional Planning Department. Her
office phone number is (909) 869-2725, and her e-mail address is
gurey@csupomona.edu
CONSENT STATEMENT:
I, ________________, hereby give my consent to participate in the research study entitled
Highland Park Next Generation: Reviving Street Culture in Northeast LA. I have read
the above information and am aware of the potential risks and complications.
Considering that audio-recording the interview would help the researcher examine the
data more closely,
_______ I give my permission to be audio-recorded.
_______ I do not give my permission to be audio-recorded.
In addition, I understand that upon completion of the interview I will have the option to
limit the usage of my interview with a release form. I fully understand that I may
withdraw from this research project at any time without prejudice or effect on my
standing with California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. I also understand that I
am free to ask questions about techniques or procedures that will be undertaken. I will
sign and return this consent form and receive a copy in case I need to refer back to it.
Finally, I understand that information obtained from me about Cal Poly Pomonas
carbon mitigation actions are not confidential and might be attributed to me, which
could bring risk of reprisal and criticisms from community members, fellow business
owners, or other stakeholders.
_________________________________ ________________
Participants signature (18+ years of age) Date
I hereby certify that I have given an explanation to the above individual of the
contemplated study and its risks and potential complications.
__________________________________ ________________
Principal Investigator Date
APPENDIX D
Consent Form
146
Project Title: Highland Park Next Generation: Reviving Street Culture in Northeast LA
Principal Investigator: Elizabeth Gallardo
Advisor: Dr. Gwendolyn Urey
IRP Protocol Number: #12-115
RELEASE STATEMENT
Please read through all options before selecting your choice.
I, ___________________________(full name) consent to allow the following usage of my
interview conducted on ________________, 2012.
This interview is:
______ Option 1 of 3: On the record (can use all information provided in this interview for
my thesis and quote you as you have requested below)
______ I prefer my quotes to be attributed to my
______ full name
______ first name
______ other (please specify) _________________________________
______ I prefer my quotes not be attributed to my name. Instead, I consent to
being referred to as (check all that apply)
______ business owner
______ resident
______ other stakeholder
______ Option 2 of 3: Background (meaning the information from the interview can be
used in the thesis, but not directly as quotes)
______ Option 3 of 3: Off the record (meaning the information from this interview is just to
inform the investigation generally, and will not be used in any form in the report)
If you selected either background or off the record can you state your reason?
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________ ________________
Participants signature (18+ years of age) Date
APPENDIX D
Consent Form
147
APPENDIX E
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148
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
General Things About Los Angeles
Center of dynamic change in US
[Los Angeles] more than most [cites in the country] is a place where the issue of how do you
create beter neighborhoods for the same neighbors is actvely playing out.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
I saw the complexity of the problems [unique to the city of Los Angeles] and it seemed like
urban planning was a way to try to address things on a larger scale.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
General Things About Los Angeles
Strong advocacy and community organizing
Los Angeles has well organized community bases, and in order to accomplish the physical
aspect of community building, there need to be community organizatons to partner with for
outreach.
Los Angeles has a rich history of organizing in immigrant communites against Propositon187,
Mark Ridley Thomas organizing in South LA and of tenant organizing. This history colors todays
ability to work in these communites.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
Early Impressions of Highland Park
Far-fung
Northeast LA was far away from everything social and cultural - it just felt like the end of the
universe
[our business was] doing ok, cause we were dragging people over here and promotng a lot of
events, but generally, the idea that it was some golden tcket to open in a spot over here, I would
debate that stll.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
The challenges of the landscape in LA- that it is so spread out and comparatvely dense, make
organizatons more conscious of geography in the landscape because they need to fnd ways to
build community space or build gathering space to nurture [their organizaton].
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
Highland Park has always been more transitory a pass-through community
[Highland Park] had a quality of edge cites because of its lack of grounding and sense of
collectve. I think it stll struggles with that.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
LA is a hidden city You kind of have to know where to go, its like 400 square miles and theres
all kinds of interestng stuf spread out over those 400 square miles, but its not necessarily
cohesively located in a way that youd ever know about it.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
149
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
Early Impressions of Highland Park
Block by block safety
Highland Park has lost its nity grity it used to be a very, very tough community in 80s and
early 90s. There were multple gangs in 2 block areas people couldnt cross the street because
it belonged to another gang.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Danger varied block to block.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
In terms of geographic safety, York was always seen as the dividing point between Eagle Rock
and Highland Park, the safer neighborhood to the north.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Early Impressions of Highland Park
Lacked social engagement
[I] never got the feeling that there was much outreach to the community even from Sea and
Space, which was a public gallery
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
A methodology of social practce has always been foreign to Los Angeles
The greatest challenge for a cultural producer is integraton its all about community response
and engagementif you have this set plan you arent being terribly responsive
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
How we create access and a sense of belonging for [undocumented] Latnos has its own
challenges.
The Historic Highland Park Neighborhood Council has broached the conversaton of how to
make meetngs/events more appealing to monolingual Spanish speakers. Its challenging to do
because not everyone on the Neighborhood Council, not everyone who is actve, speaks Spanish.
We have very limited resources- its not like its very simple to translate everything we do... I can
see why people are turned of to it.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Early Impressions of Highland Park
Looked exactly like Park Slope
Yorks storefronts looked very similar to the frumpy mom and pop stores, party stores, and the
occasional artst studio that could be found in Park Slope before gentrifcaton.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Why Highland Park
Afordable
150
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
The city of Los Angeles receives Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funding for
economic development and the city contracts Barrio Planners to do economic development in
Northeast LA.
City also ofers amenites to businesses located in Enterprise Zones theyll waive site plan
reviews, electricity and water are discounted and the state ofers higher income tax credits,
which makes areas like Highland Park afordable for business development.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Especially between 2005-2010, Highland Park was mainly atractve to artsts because it was
cheap. Theres cheap real estate, its a beautful place to be because of all the hills, theres a lot
of access to open space.
Locaton choice was primarily motvated by afordability Garretsons partner was paying $650
for apartment rentng a room in a house in a nearby (but higher priced neighborhood) cost
$500. When Garretson moved in, the landlord raised the rent $100, but since 2006, rent has
only increased $25.
Its always been a mater of price. We knew we couldnt fnd [a new place that was as good a
deal]- Wed looked intermitently and understood [that]. Especially as tme went on- I didnt get
a job that paid enough for us to potentally move untl 2008, and by then prices had started to go
up around the neighborhood.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Marshall had been turned of to adjacent neighborhoods like Silverlake and Echo Park Highland
Park provided more bang for your buck.
I didnt get much of a beter price, but the place that we got here is like a mansion compared to
what we had in Silver Lake or Echo Park.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Could not aford to buy a home in the adjacent neighborhood of Eagle Rock, and was therefore
looking in less popular neighborhoods of Mount Washington and Highland Park.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Cheap room and fateful- had always love the area, wanted to live in LA
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
There is a large stock of historic or small afordable homes with character [and] at least some
design sensibility.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
I wouldnt be able to live in a huge development like [those] along the Gold Line [light rail
transit] in Pasadena because I wouldnt be able to aford that. Newly constructed housing is not
generally afordable to low income residents.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
I had wanted to buy real estate and Highland Park was the most afordable opton.
(Resident 3, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
151
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
Why Highland Park
Walkable/Bikeable
At the tme of moving to Highland Park, Garretson was without car and primarily using a bicycle
for transport. This necessitated that she live in a bikeable locaton.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
When choosing Highland Park, Resident 1 liked the openness of neighborhood and that she
could walk to Eagle Rock and Occidental. Years later, now she can also walk to York.
I wanted to be able to walk down the street cause thats the kind of lifestyle I was looking for
and I want my child to be able to walk down the street, be able to walk places.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
I wanted to live closer to beter public transit, I wanted to make transit more a part of my
regular life
Its a combinaton of both [values and fnances] part of my values system is that I want to
make beter use of public transit and alternatve methods of transportaton
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
I love how walkable [Highland Park] is.
(Resident 3, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
There was something called the art ride they would get a group of people together who
wanted to go on a nightme ride, and they would stop at galleries in succession along Figueroa,
[York], Colorado Boulevard, Eagle Rock Boulevard, and at tmes, on a good summer night when
the weather was great, there could be a hundred people on a bicycle ride. They would end
up here all at one tme, to me it was very dynamic, cause theyd park their bicycles out front,
theyd march into the building, theyd suck up every piece of liquid that was available, theyd use
the restroom. It was great it was just one of those fushes that came through that was a litle
excitement They would park their bicycles on the sidewalk, there would be not necessarily
a trafc interrupton but people would have to go slow, because this corner happened to be
a nucleus for a lot of people moving back and forth. There started to be some food trucks that
showed up, so that was that situaton.
(C. Graham, personal communicaton, April 30, 2013)
Why Highland Park
Diversity
The patern of gentrifcaton is really diferent if the surrounding neighborhood is African
American or if its Latno [The University of Michigan] studied the degree to which whites are
willing to move into African American or Latno neighborhoods and they show the diferentals.
If the surrounding neighborhood was African American the pace [of gentrifcaton was] slower.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
I remember going to a party and I was thrilled with my new place of residence with its full
spectrum of life- it had everything I was unaware at the tme of the stratfed caste system of
the fats to the mountains People at the party indicated to me that yes in fact it was wonderful
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but why couldnt they do something about that down there- With their hands gesturing down
to Highland Park. Which of course was half the magic as far as I was concerned.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
[Meetngs for the planning process were] very diverse- we had the neighborhood council
people and business owners, but then we also had residents.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Theres lots of people who are just like me and lots of people who are way diferent from me.
Its a really nice mix. I love the diversity here.
The neighborhood the resident bought in is comprised of families, young couples, some kids,
and some rentals with roommates.
(Resident 3, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
Why Highland Park
Lack of amenites for local populaton
There is a signifcant demand for culture on the east side, especially for a record store because
bands and artsts are already present.
Everybody I knew who was making art or in a band at least 50% of them were living in
Highland Park, Glassell Park, Mount Washington, or Eagle Rock
At the same tme with this populaton, there were no restaurants and nothing to do.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Graham wanted to create a business for a more mature/older audience, more professional,
educated, later at night, higher price points, with an emphasis on French wine.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Why Highland Park
Liked house
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
I was prety exclusively looking in Highland Park... I really love this neighborhood.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
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Why Highland Park
Proximity to Downtown
Highland Parks relatve proximity to downtown and other neighborhoods that have already
been gentrifed establishes it as a prime entry point for growth.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
[Living in Highland Park] felt like you could live in the country and yet there it was, the
metropolis, 5 minutes away.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Introducton to York
Social
Introduced through growing up in the neighborhood and atending a nearby school.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Garretsons boyfriend already lived on York.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Marshalls wifes family had been in Highland Park since the 1930s. When they were looking for
a place to live, they saw many of their family-oriented friends moving to Highland Park, where
they could get an afordable home as a young family.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Friends in Eagle Rock were talking up Highland Park, encouraging their friends to move there.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Housseinzadeh was friends with small business owners on York, which reintroduced her to the
neighborhood as an adult.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
I was in a band with some people who lived in Glassell Park, the frst tme I was coming to the
neighborhood other than going to a bar and thought it was nice.
(Resident 3, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
Introducton to York
Culture
Originally came to York for the Artwalk and galleries.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Arroyo Arts Collectve hosted event Business Improvisaton District, where artsts collaborated
with business owners. The resident built a comfy chair art project in front of Pets with Fez that
remained on York for three years.
In 2007-08, the resident was selected to partcipate in a show for Fellows of Contemporary Art.
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The resident again chose York as a project site, plantng guerilla poppies along the corridor that
contnued to resow years afer the project.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Housseinzadeh remembers coming to York in 2002 for a holiday open house put on by NELA Art
and thinking that it was cool.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Placemaking in Highland Park has been going on in various locatons for 20 years
Creatve Placemaking has gone through many labels and approaches. During Phase 1, it
was considered low art, folk practce, outsider art; Phase 2 elevated it to public art,
community based public art; Phase 3 implied a fancy interventon the act of supposing you
know beter and can ofer an interventon to their [problems]. This has all been abandoned
in last 5 years (though it is stll used by architects), for what Ward suggests is the most recent
incarnaton: Phase 4, social practce
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Introducton to York
Travel
Pia recalls biking on Yorks sidewalks as a child.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Marshall used to ride his bike along York for recreaton.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Housseinzadeh recalls driving along York as a pass-through when she was a child. She especially
remembers looking at the distnctve signs.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Would bike around to go to nearby bars.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Introducton to York
Work
Lehman worked as a project manager with Shared Spaces, the consultant subcontracted by LA
Conservaton Corp to make the York vision plan. Worked as project manager on York vision plan.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Was introduced to York through work with the Historic Highland Park Neighborhood Council.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Moved to the neighborhood and began patronizing York to do buildout and start the business.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
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Why York
Zeitgeist
Regarding a Yoga studio that Pia helped located on York, he says that, all the energy that was
occurring on the street all the new businesses could cater to people who could aford yoga
Its a mater of whats in vogue at the moment
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Garretson remarks that community rides are where its at, because its fun to have a big gang of
cyclists
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Connectons are being made for the frst tme in the neighborhood, we all knew this was a cool
neighborhood, but we didnt have anything in common. Now we have in common that we like
this kind of food, or we like this record store, or we like this clothes store. We have all these
things in common now, were meetng people.
I think [bikes and pedestrianism] is more a cultural and generatonal shif that were all [a part
of] its a zeitgeist that were all collectvely enjoying. You dont feel like the freak when you ride
your bike like you used to.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Theres a lot of stuf in the air. People are realizing that changing public space and reducing
our dependence on cars has so many benefts for the community and our health on so many
levels It was a really good tme to experiment.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Were seeing a whole changing of a lot of generatons right now. Were seeing a real split.
Young locals are opening businesses like Highland Park Caf and Fusion Burger
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Its the diference between Eric Garcet 15 years ago when he was a professor here: Eric and
Amy then and now live in Silverlake. So now if Eric and Amy were 15 years younger and Eric was
at Occidental now, they would live here. Then, Oxy might be a good place to teach for the young
professor with politcal background, but he wasnt going to live here.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
York is a place for creatve professionals and young people who want a more urban
environment, but dont necessarily want to live in a downtown environment. They want to own
a house not a condominium or a lof.
Theres more of a desire to have a civic involvement theres more of an interest in working
collectvely rather than [in isolaton].
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
The bigger picture is that this is a representaton of the value system of the community, where
were not going to prioritze concrete over a place to sit and gather with your kids.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
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The improvement on York is a result of a synthesis of likeminded people.
(T. Blackman, personal communicaton, November 8, 2012)
Everyone on York is super friendly it kind of has a small town feel and people want to live where
everyone is friendly.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why York
Local Anchors
Caf de Leche family:
Theyve been around for a long tme, I think theyre just trying to do nice things I would
defnitely not refer to them as outsiders, theyre defnitely locals.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Would go to Caf de Leche prior to residency for cofee.
Liked hippy aesthetc of Pets with Fez.
[Pets with Fez Weaving Studio] was very eccentric and had a cool look- it looked like you were
in Haight Ashbury in the 60s. They werent at all yuppies, they were cool weirdos. I said, Thats
such a cool place to be next door to. I want to go there, I dont want to be next to Starbucks.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Restaurants provide community anchors: there are people who have lived in the neighborhood
that didnt have a sense of community, and now every night people come in here for dinner and
they introduce themselves with their address.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Woman from Pets with Fez would maintain street furniture.
The man from the video store put soil in plot, prior to poppy installaton
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
I go in businesses [like Glacos] because I know what they have.
Went to Pets with Fez at NELA Art event:
I remember thinking, this place is really cool. And I was having a hard tme fguring out what the
neighborhood was about, because I was already familiar with the paterns of Silverlake it felt
interestng, familiar
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
The part of York that has changed dramatcally is extremely small - only 2 blocks. While its very
intense, were really just talking about Avenue 50-52.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
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Rumbling of art community being artculated by the Arroyo Arts Collectve, which was founded
1-2 yrs before Ward arrived long tme residents that were organizing through artstc events
were a great catalyst
Of all the newer businesses on York, Caf de Leche is the only one that hasnt changed hands a
million tmes.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Getng the Caf de Leche cofee shop- just getng certain businesses that appeal to a certain
demographic.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Cafe de Leche makes me feel like Im part of a neighborhood.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why York
Council ofce supported improvement
The Council Ofce helped with permitng, as well as dealing with community protest.
The Council Ofce wanted retail and healthy food in the neighborhood.
Getng a bike corral does really count, those things are very encouraging
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
The Council Ofce had received limited funds for a specifc project, and needed to educate the
community about the process.
The challenge was that you have this whole group of people showing up who had been actve
in the community before and had grown really disenchanted with the process. They were really
negatve.
But in this case, Huizar was coming to us.
Council ofce then expanded their scope and applied for much more funding for the pocket park
on Avenue 50.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Council ofce can ofer support but does not gap the cultural divide between new businesses
and older establishments.
Councilman Huizar restored the Judy Baca mural illustratng the history of Highland Park.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
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Sam Hall Kaplan, an urban planner with the MTA and a behind the scenes advisor to the
Councilman, knew they had secured funding for improvements for York and Huntngton Drive,
and suggested that master plans are really a huge waste of money rather than do another
plan, why not do short term to medium term improvement projects? He could say that as
someone who has been doing master plans for 50 years. It was Sams original idea and he is the
one who suggested Green LA.
The Council Ofce decided to start an initatve of community-based, partcipatory planning
eforts out of that came both the porch and also the park.
One of the good things about immediate improvement projects is that they really work for
politcal representatves youre not going to have an event for a master plan- nobody wants to
come and be handed a copy of a master plan.
You cant meet the next morning and sit on the master plan.
Theres a natural community of interest between urban guerilla immediate design and elected
ofcials.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
To contract with the city, it is easier to subcontract for a contractor who is already on the list of
approved contractors. In the case of the York Street Porch, LA Conservaton Corp was already on
the citys list and they subcontracted Shared Spaces to do the vision plan and the project. But
Shared Spaces arranged the whole thing, with the Council Ofces blessing.
If you want to go in and do a stand alone contract, it would take two years to do it that way. It
was intended to be a fast project- the idea was to build it in six months.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
The Neighborhood Council was also instrumental in bringing bike lanes to York.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
There is a strong history of the Neighborhood Councils stewardship of improvement and
collaboraton with the Council Ofce.
(T. Blackman, personal communicaton, November 8, 2012)
The Council Ofce wrote a grant for the pocket park on Avenue 50 with the Los Angeles
Neighborhood Initatve (LANI)
The councilman thought the Implementaton and Acton Plan was beter for community in the
long term when there is a change of administraton, plans tend to go away so it was more
important for the community to have a how-to guide.
(Z. Loera, personal communicaton, November 29, 2012)
Why York
Street confguraton
York has always felt a lot more safe than Figueroa. The width of the street isnt very wide and
theres no parking lots on York. All the businesses abut the street directly so there isnt a bufer.
York doesnt feel as much as a commercial boulevard compared to Figueroa.
People cant speed and they can actually see whats going on in the street. They might notce a
shop thats never been there before.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
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As a former cyclist I really like the bike lanes, I dont know how aware I am of the road diet
stuf, but I love public space infrastructure. Its nice to be able to go for a stroll down the block,
which we always did [stroll] but theres more stuf now. We walk down the street all the tme to
get a cup of cofee, or to just walk down the street.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
York is slower going for the drivers now, but its safer for the pedestrians.
Pedestrians win, haha.
Im happy its shaped this way... The acton of changing the roadway will contribute to the
commercial success of [the business corridor] The city made the right moves towards this
being a healthy merchant community.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
York is easy to access, easy to park. If you dont mind walking, you can stll park on side streets
for free.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
York is a Human scale historic main street.
The density and human scale of street has created a dramatc sense of change.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
Narrower streets raise peoples consciousness that there is change and possibly an ofering that
they otherwise they might just pass by because theyre on their way to another destnaton. I
imagine [narrow streets], in any community, would bring a certain awareness its probably a
really healthy idea.
Narrowing the street puts the whole idea of parking and driving and walking in a whole new
way of relatng to urban living.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Combined with the fact thats its a relatvely narrow street with the storefronts fairly
contnuous against the street gives it a kind of an interestng scale to it. It has a certain sense of
place that way.
The road diet and bike lanes help dramatcally for these small commercial districts to be
successful.
I know other neighborhoods that aspire to be these types of districts but they have 2 lanes in
each directon with fast moving trafc- I think that works against the goal. The road diet slows
down the cars, the people driving can then see whats there and maybe theyre more entced to
stop and it also creates a beter pedestrian environment in terms of less trafc noise, if you have
parked cars at the sides.
Past [Avenue] 52 and 53, its stll not very actvated. I think you have a diferent building type
not as many storefronts right up against the street, theres more parking lots, theres more
newer buildings that have less character or [are] poorly constructed buildings.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
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The efect is maybe not direct to families, but its important for communites to have public
space and maybe thats not an idea at the forefront of working class families, but it adds to the
quality of life. And yeah, there is defnitely a beneft to the businesses in the area with having
things like a parklet.
You could have predicted that York would have its boom with business and cofee shops and
nightlife because of the design of the streets. The concept is that streets that are like rooms are
atractve to businesses and nightlife and the type of development thats happened on York.
It has more to do with proximity of streets Colorado is much wider, if you see someone across
the street, youre not going to be able to yell at them and get their atenton, whereas on York,
you run into people- its easy to talk to people across the street. Thats whats special about York
and thats whats atracted businesses that you would associate with a gentrifed neighborhood
like cofeeshops [and] yoga studios.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Scale is important to York it has main street feel to it, whereas Figueroa is more of a wider
transit corridor.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why York
Process of community educaton/empowerment
The citys Community Development Department sends out an outreach leter, Barrio Planners
does the same, educatng about services ofered.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
It was interestng to see that some of the people that had been in the neighborhood for longer
were kind of resentul, but it seemed like they didnt understand the community process- the
councilman- his staf members- are there to help us, so if theres a street light that is out, theyre
not going to magically know it, they need someone to call them.
Community outreach aimed to get more partcipaton and more of the real needs of residents
came up.
[Huizars] ability to educate the community, and to keep that discussion in the community,
thats maybe what will carry the project forward.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
No one is focusing on economic developments aesthetc issues or the environment in which
they are trying to do the development. People are too focused on the business side, not the
marketng side.
They say something really general like advertse, do social media, but what do you mean by do
social media? The fact is that no real marketng strategy works unless you already are presentng
something somebody desires.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
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Ignorance people just havent had the opportunity to be exposed to economic and urban
planning and theyve also lived in a capitalist world their whole life so they dont get that thats
not the only opton.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
Their idea was to get everyone who wants to work on this to come together each tme, to try
to have a consistent group of people We wanted it to be the same people throughout the
process... if you go to 8 diferent groups to have separate conversatons, its very difcult to pull
it all into a consensus.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
The parklet is a good example of [community outreach] Before the opening when they
announced that the city was going to commit to building it. There was an event here with a
proposal and artst rendering of what it would look like all the people that were part of the
planning process spoke, and there was latno representaton there, even monolingual Spanish
speaking representaton.
As a younger newer generaton of Latnos when we host big events that are milestones for our
NC, when theres a very low monolingual Spanish speaking Latno turnout I feel like were failing
the community.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Why York
Cute area / Visible possibilites for storefront business
You could envision the pedestrian future of the street.
You had this litle gorgeous pedestrian downtown strip where everything was boarded up.
Many of the propertes had had long term vacancies.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
The wheels had been set in moton and I knew exactly which way this neighborhood was going-
I grew up in Park Slope and Ive seen this movie before and I decided I was going to star in it this
tme
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
I remember walking down to the corner of Avenue 50 and York [in 2002] peeking in the
beauty salon and thinking, I want this neighborhood to be really cool- its really cool, but I
cant fgure out whats cool about it because I dont know what I would get here other than this
random scarf from Pets with Fez.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
I dont think you can underestmate the impact of that character of the brick storefronts being
along the street edge like that. It dramatcally improves the ambiance in a subtle way. Its more
of an unconscious thing. It can provide shade that makes it more pleasant to walk. Just the fact
that the storefronts are right along the sidewalk.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Its a sweet corridor and I see similar corridors in other parts of Highland Park it feels
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comfortable. I think its more physical.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
The concentraton of businesses and storefront density is a draw for businesses and patrons
alike.
The business owner opened his bar because it was an opportunity spot (its very difcult to open
a bar from scratch). The owner was working as a Conditonal Use Permit expeditor, where he got
to know the business of opening bars prety well. The bar opened with a grandfathered beer &
wine license.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why York
Local ownership of buildings / Reasonable rent
Garretsons landlord is not absent, actually, hes around quite a bit taking care of the grounds.
He grew up in the neighborhood and lives locally. Their landlord preserves rent because they
are early comers; Garretson says we have a relatonship that goes back. The bungalow complex
has lots of long-term residents the neighbor who got them into the complex has lived there for
20 years.
We knew we couldnt aford to move. We would be paying at least $1200 for just a litle more
space The rental price for the apartment was always very low.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
I knew from looking for places to rent in Silverlake that anything that had a 310 number on the
sign I just didnt even want to talk to those people.
Word of mouth through neighbors secured tenancy.
Rent remained same as previous tenant.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Precedent food business in locaton, owners stll maintain bakery business on a smaller scale
next door.
I picked this space because the landlords are really cool, because it is owner occupied.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Either by good luck or by the intent of landlords, a good number of businesses got sustainably
low rent and they wont survive the next increase unless they happen to be people with lots of
money.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
A collecton of small buildings that have been owned for a while can be rented at reasonable
rates (as opposed to new constructon that needs high rent to cover capital constructon costs).
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
The Hermosillo bought the property from the bank and the beer and wine license from the
owner of the previous bar.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
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Why York
Walking dream
I drove by [the parklet] the other day and it was full of people. Every seat was full of a body. I
was like what is going on in the parklet? Is it an organized sit-in or something?
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
I can walk out to a couple of bars and restaurants that I actually like
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Theres a very pedestrian and bicycle conscious movement which Im very happy about.
Primary reason for locatng on York is that it is close to home, Graham could walk to work.
Its the LA dream, to walk to work.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Because I work from home, there are lots of days where I have no reason to use my car, which
is really a bonus for me.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
Businesses owners who work on York live in the neighborhood and people want to walk to work,
people want to bike people see these storefronts as live-work investments.
(Z. Loera, personal communicaton, November 29, 2012)
Theres a good amount of foot trafc, especially in the two blocks between Avenue 50 and 52.
Theres lots of people who patronize the local businesses who live in walking distance.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why York
Small businesses
Small businesses patronized include: Bicycle Doctor, Hair Zone (barber for 10 years), Galcos, El
Arco Iris, My Taco, Antojitos Guerrero
Opened a client on York Namaste Yoga.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
I like supportng small businesses.
Knows business owners on York and wants to support them.
Sign paintng project as economic development tool for small businesses to draw atenton to
the corridor.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Business owners are the biggest drivers of revitalizaton. People who are engaged civically and
understand that the business corridors of the community are important assets to the city and
to the neighborhood. York is a great example of how the businesses work together to bring
improvements to their community. And they do it without a Business Improvement District.
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[Small business owners on York] are all happy and supportve of things like this. They talk
to each other, they work together, they know each other, theyre actve with the Chamber of
Commerce. And rightly so- thats where that interest should be.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Patronizes Marios Liquor Store for craf beer, Galcos, Do It Best Hardware store, Maximilliano
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Figueroa spaces too large for a small business
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Why York
Sense of Culture
In all this talk about gentrifcaton, people always forget that Highland Park has always been a
prety diverse community. Its always been very artstc since before it was annexed by the city
of LA. Its very bohemian and people forget that.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
There is a strong cultural history, it has been historically a place where artsts live it has that
vibe.
There are a lot of prety liberal people who live here if not outright radicals its a litle hidden
hot bed.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Highland Park has a recognizable cultural/artstc traditon.
Historic arts organizatons like the Arroyo Arts Collectve provide a latent cache of culture that
a similar neighboring community wouldnt have to fuel the gentrifcaton.
Certainly having Oxy doesnt hurt its not sufcient or causal, but it helps.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
[NELA artwalk] shows diferent face of highland park and northeast in general
NELA Arts is able to show that it is rich, with an artstc culture. Its a contnuance of what is
a history of artsty in the Northeast in general. Highland Park has always been a neighborhood
that housed and atracted a lot of artsts since the 60s and 70s.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Why York
York corridor had nothing to do with moving to area
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
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Why Not York
Lack of amenites for local populaton
I dont think people should be intmidated to go to these new businesses, but I dont think
theres a lot of outreach from the new businesses to include older residents that have been
here.
Ive seen seoras early in the morning going to get their cofee at Highland Park Caf.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Local residents are happy that they fnally have access to fresh healthy food.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
York wasnt on my radar at all. It wasnt something that I was aware of there being any kind
of community or anything happening there That I would actually go there, I would have never
thought of it.
If you said I would be going down to York regularly, I would have just laughed, and said probably
not, cause theres not the kind of stuf that you would normally get there
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
The folks who were against the liquor license- they would also never in their life go to that
restaurant.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
York has a sense of obligaton to ofer what its populaton requires.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
The majority of Latno inhabitants in the Northeast, in Highland Park this group that Im
talking about of long tme Latno residents I guess is a small porton of the Latno populaton
overall. The greater Latno populaton in the area feels like, the types of things that exist in this
community- that are tools and resources that exist in this community arent for them, arent
geared towards them, are not accessible to them
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Street could use a litle more cleaning and security services. Owner likes the model of the BID in
the Downtown Arts District and would like to see something like that on York.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why Not York
Secret happenings of York Bl
The [art] studios were also just really private spaces.
The people in the studios keep to themselves, they arent really interested in having
relatonships or establishing a community of artsts, a lot of them travel a lot and do shows in
other cites and countries, they just see the studio as an inexpensive way to have a workspace in
the city that they live in.
People in studios frost their windows, which further limits their interacton with the outside
world.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
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From the outside, nothing was going on. Artst studios were only visible during the Artwalk.
All of the businesses without windows are only accessible to locals the lack of windows on
businesses obfuscate use
Everything was boarded up- it wasnt really boarded up, it was just that they were all artst
workspaces and studios... Occasionally there would be an Artwalk and everything would be
open. Youd be like oh wow, that isnt actually a derelict building, theres actually cute stuf
going on in there.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
No one knew who owned or maintained certain propertes.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Mike Kelley, a renouned California artst who passed away last year, had his studio on York it
was always a scene [at the studio] but never spilled out into the neighborhood.
He wasnt there to be part of the community, he was there to create his own community.
Their approach to community art and creatvity was the applicaton of interventon versus
integraton they knew beter.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Previously there was not much spillover with Occidental College colleges are very insular
communites. The presence of college campus doesnt mean anything unless they make
deliberate eforts to reach out to the community.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Before they renovated the bar, it was a scary place. You couldnt see in at all from the street
there was no way to tell what was going on inside.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why Not York
Infexible land use or absent landlords
Owner of Namaste building lives overseas in Asia.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Studio on York has absentee landlord who lives in Orange County. The landlord did grow up in
neighborhood, went to Franklin High. Wouldnt fx anything.
The studio neighbor owns her building she has a totally diferent stake in the whole afair- she
takes really good care of her building. She has maintained it has improved it, and she has always
been really concerned about the liability of the buildings next to her cause our landlord really
doesnt maintain them.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Previous (lack of) permitng causes potental hassle for landlords to update uses.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
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Most of the commercial buildings on York Boulevard are owned by speculators who bought
it up during the white fight and all live other places. And they dont give a shit about our
neighborhood. It could all burn down for all they care. They will rent to anybody who will give
them a long lease, be it a porn store, another dispensary and thats what our neighborhoods
been struggling with is this absentee landlordism.
BIDS tend to favor absentee landlords over tenants.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
The people that really care about the historical preservaton of the community are very much
against any type of new housing development.
There needs to be more compromise from those residents, because Los Angeles is expected to
contnue to have populaton increases and people are coming here whether we like it or not...
We need to prepare for that and at the same tme, we need to ensure that were not displacing
people. So we need more density and more afordable housing.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Owner of the previous business did not own the building. In the end there was a dispute over
the property and it ended up in foreclosure. Eventually a 3rd party ended up with it, which is
who the business purchased it from.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why Not York
No high end audience / foot trafc
At a former failed cofee shop business One of the owners would make comments in front of
customers like I hate Highland Park, the people here dont spend enough money They were
just so clearly not about the community. They really just thought it was a good investment. It
was right when Highland Park was just startng to possibly be considered a destnaton. They
were like, Oh, were going to get in and build this neighborhood and cash out on it
But I think that kind of outright disparagement is a turnof for a lot of people the kind of
people who are invested in the neighborhood are invested in celebratng the fact that they live in
this great place.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Marshalls friends expensive vintage shop has not drawn its audience east yet.
His place is a litle more expensive. They go and sell dresses for $100 on Melrose. Hes open
here all week and that audience doesnt come here yet.
Hes staying there because hes got too much stuf, not because the business is great around
here.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Art galleries werent working with the community, and therefore didnt last.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Those against liquor license against Ba because they would never go there themselves.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
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Higher end businesses will be sustainable if people keep buying houses.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
Why Not York
Parking
I wonder if parking is a big issue in terms of having larger stores because theres not a lot: the
parking stock is limited.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
The city recently changed the two hour street parking to one hour, which prevents people from
doing two things in one trip.
Nobody can come here and do more than one thing you cant go to a restaurant and a store.
The priority that the city took is the parking meters, along with the new meters came vigilant
enforcement Customers have lef here despondent because of that and dont want to come
back.
If theyre serious about people coming to York, parking should be free.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
The people that are here have already found a place to park.
If enough businesses open and theres not enough parking, it will just be like a real city, youll
have to drive around and look for a space. You should ride your bike here. If youre driving
around, then you owe it to everyone to go look for a space blocks away. Im not going to enable
that kind of nonsense. Take the friggin bus.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Parking detracts from the character of a street Theres a market thats got a huge parking lot
for a whole block its not very interestng to walk along.
People want to park as close as possible to the entrance even though its just a short walk- its
so unpleasant to walk through a parking lot that people actually make an efort to park near the
door. Thats how bad surface parking is, so if a whole block is surface parking, thats not a fun
block to walk along. It has a huge impact.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Old Town Pasadena is successful because it hides parking back of the street, keeping the
pedestrian area nice.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
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Why Not York
Criminal or drug addicted neighbors
Historic Highland Park Gangs:
Dogtown
Highland Park The Jalapenos
57 Avenues
43 Avenues
Anela Trese
BSK Back Street Kings
OCK O____ Commitng Crime
Monte Vista
Garvanza Gang
Local Highland Park gangs were mult-generatonal and family run partaking in actvites
including graft, fghts, robbing people, beer runs.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Crackhead neighbor moved away 2009 due to her mental health She would ofer [us drugs]-
she would tell us that she had goten a rock her husband would stand out front and polish his
guns, it was really scary, she stole our mail once, she would make ofers of sexual services to my
husband and to our other neighbor she was totally crazy. She would come late at night when
she was high and be raving in the middle courtyard and knock on peoples doors She would
ofen be standing blocking the [complex] entrance and kind of harass you when you came in.
The Police never did anything except to tell her to setle down.
There was a creepy guy living in the apartments across the street, who was obviously drunk and
high, and he and wife were doing weekly yard sale thing on the street in front of liquor store on
corner for a prety long tme.
There were a number of shady characters. Before Garretson moved in, their house had been
broken into and 2-3 nice guitars got stolen, cameras got stolen, cash, a big break in.
Another neighbor in the complex commited suicide (hung himself) in 2009-10.
The guy who moved in afer that is maybe a crackhead or a methhead.
He would be playing really loud electronic music really late at night.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
The general percepton of HP is that its kind of dangerous neighborhood with low income,
working families, and theres gang issues here.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
The original bar was considered a Paisa bar the police called it a B girl bar.
B girls would work bar and men would buy them drinks in order to get dances with them. The
drinks for the girls cost three tmes as much as regular drinks (you were buying their tme), and
then the bar would give girls a cut of the drink profts.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
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Why Not York
Poorly maintained trees
The street view of the business is blocked by poorly maintained trees.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Existng trees are ruining the sidewalks. The trees should be treated as part of the infrastructure
and individuals should not be in charge of maintaining them because they are not maintained
individuals take it upon themselves to deal with them and then they are mispruned, and as a
result not growing to full size.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Why Not York
Worried about hassle of commute
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Why Not York
Religious interferences for new businesses
The southside church members made it very difcult for Ba to open they started a petton for
non-residents to sign, and described Ba (a restaurant) as a late night bar.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
York Today
Gentrifcaton
I dont think you can prevent gentrifcaton, but you defnitely want to help people who are
getng displaced by it.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
It always kind of seemed like an outsider infuence.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
The founder of NELA Arts attude about [graft] is basically a colonial mindset lets come
in and make this space something that I want to see because this is what I think of when I think
of an urban neighborhood that I want to see, and I want to atract the people who I want to live
here with. I dont want to think about the people who are here and what their problems are
and what their dynamics are. I just want to kick them out so that I can bring in my friends. And
thats basically the same thing that I heard from the woman who started the [pre-Sea & Space]
gallery who just wanted to bring her friends in and didnt really want to deal with what was
going on in the neighborhood because it was foreign to her...
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
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APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
Eventually nice businesses displace grit, which is part of the neighborhoods history and identty.
Im sensitve about this issue of gentrifcaton because Ive lived in the East Village in NY in the
90s.
Theres a golden period when the entrepreneurs frst show up- the small businesses- where its
like wow great, theres a place to eat or get delicious cofee or see a band right on our corner,
and a frst its a really positve thing. Whenever something nice would open up the heroin
addicts would move a couple blocks away, a litle further east. But even that was a litle part of
the charm there because it was always a streetwise neighborhood since the 60s.
Marshall was sensitve to opening something that looked fancy, I knew there was going to be a
backlash, so I came in with a litle of a defensive attude.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Graham is hyper-aware of gentrifcaton and could recognize signs that York was progressing in
that directon.
Growing up in New York you get a graduate degree in gentrifcaton and change of
neighborhoods.
Graham describes the frst wave, where artsts taking over empty storefronts and make the
neighborhood look bad, the second wave, where adventurous hobby businesses open like
furniture stores, boutques, retro clothing shops, and then the tpping point, when the dialog
changes.
Upper middle class young people decry gentrifcaton, but the older conservatve populaton,
hipsters, yuppy populaton are all happy.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Not all patrons of new businesses are new to the neighborhood- long term residents patronize
Awesome Playground, younger long-term residents patronize Caf de Leche.
York somewhere along the way of the [Full Dollar] project reached its tpping point.
Were in a sweet spot where there can be some fusion, where local Franklin High School
graduates can stll access rentng a building on York and startng a business and having an impact
on their community and serving multple people who might be here.
The key to maintaining a sweet spot is in places like the parklet, that open up and welcome
many diferent kinds of people, and you dont necessarily have to buy things. The key is also
doing something to ensure that local businesses are stll able to open here.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
There are no ant-gentrifcaton measures in place.
The improvements on York are not revitalizaton because revitalizaton is a euphemism for
gentrifcaton.
I wouldnt take the porch project now because of the diference of where were sitng now
and what this was three years ago.
None of these people would have been in here Their presence is mutually exclusive of the
presence of the folks who were here before
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For 2nd generaton gentrifers the appearance of less gang actvity here is important.
The noton that the 1st generaton are people who are artsts, hipsters, the gay and lesbian
community, punk rockers who actually like the neighborhood as it is- not just cause its cheap
but because they actually want to live in that neighborhood. So theyre not moving in with
any hope that it will change, theyre moving in hoping that it doesnt. The second generaton
are folks who are moving in because they hope that it does change and they actually want to
stay themselves, but theyre not buying the current neighborhood, theyre buying the future
neighborhood.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
In a wild kind of way those people kind of goten their hope- its now a hip, cool spot, flled
with yuppies and the full spectrum of life. So it did get fxed according to them. But I do think
that York struggled so because of a similar mentality. They were imports, transplants into the
hood and felt they came with vision and perspectve that was far beyond the locals capacity
to understand its value. And thats a fairly pretentous positon to take when you move into a
neighborhood I wonder if that in itself wasnt part of the challenge why it didnt really fy as
rapidly.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
We didnt want to just promote gentrifcaton, we wanted to be sensitve to the needs of the
existng low income Latno residents in the area. Which are actually in a diferent Council District
because the boundary shifs on the next street south of York. We were very deliberate about
involving not just the businesses but the surrounding residents.
If you maintain it well, [afordable housing] actually could lead to gentrifcaton.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Recounts from a community meetng someones theory that, There are four horseman of the
gentrifcaton apocalypse A high end cofee shop, a used record store, a comic book store, and
a gastro pub.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
I got a good deal on my house because it was already rehabbed [by the house fippers] its
been interestng being in a fipped place cause you kind of want to make it your own, but I just
knew that realistcally I was going to be spending my money on the property and I wasnt going
to have a lot to be the one putng in new foors, knocking out the walls
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
York Today
Dedicaton to character
Theres a lot of people who really care about Highland Park. It will probably take afer the
model of Eagle Rock which has really fought having any sort of chain restaurant.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Its stll a key to a businesses success to really know Highland Park.
There are enough people here who are really invested in the community or the place that they
173
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
live in, that they call their home. They like new stuf its nice to have a cofee shop in youre
neighborhood, its nice to have a parklet, its nice to have a place to go out to eat, a new place
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
We wanted it to be tny like a hole in the wall in EuropeIts more about selling that feel, selling
a litle more of an experience rather than just heres another dark bar.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Frightened people should stay home where they cant do any damage. I do not want them
here Im not going to waste a second of my tme trying to comfort frightened people. If youre
afraid of the pizzeria and the party goods store, then you dont belong here. I cant help you.
Restored the neighbor bakerys old neon sign.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
York represents the old and the new blended together.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
York is culturally specifc in its ofering, which is primarily Latno.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
We were very deliberate about involving not just the businesses, but the surrounding
residents.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Whats huge in Highland Park is people who want to preserve the historical character of the
neighborhood.
Highland Park is home to the largest historic preservaton overlay zone and it has the highest
concentraton of pre-World War I homes in Los Angeles.
The Garvanza Improvement Associaton work with the Highland Park Heritage Trust to educate
homeowners on preserving their property not changing the character of the homes to make it
look more modern- to keep the character of the neighborhood. They are some of the most vocal
critcs of new developments that dont ft into the character of the neighborhood.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Council Ofce is commited to historic preservaton, but for areas outside the Historic
Preservaton Overlay Zone, people generally respect the historic nature of the neighborhood and
are not changing facades.
(Z. Loera, personal communicaton, November 29, 2012)
York Today
Improvement conversaton is artst dominated
Artsts have always been the pathfnders for gentrifcaton. Creatve types have always made
it easier for others to follow. I dont have any negatve opinions about the new creatve
infrastructure thats been brought into York Boulevard. Its a welcome change.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
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APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
I found Brian Mullman to be really ofensive- hes the guy who started NELA Art, originally
from Midwest. I was in this meetng with him we were talking about the neighborhood and
doing projects and he said that he really wanted to focus on getng the graft removed from
the railroad bridges and overpasses on the 110 [freeway] because thats what you see when you
come into our community and its just a really bad representaton for people who are coming in
and wantng to see a nice community.
I felt like it was a statement that didnt acknowledge the communites that actually live in the
neighborhood and the kinds of visual dynamics that go on... Control of public visual space is a
real source of power. Tagging and graft is an atempt to control to public visual space by people
who are really disenfranchised and dont have the means to have access to other spaces where
they can put some visual thing up.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Artwalk? Even when it started I was like, why are you calling it the artwalk? Youre giving credit
to artsts who arent there. The studios are all boarded up, theyre not open- so its not their
artwalk Two galleries does not quite an artwalk make.
Whos calling it the artwalk?
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Agenda of new York Plan dominated by artst types
Being the resident of exactly the area where theyre doing this, I have diferent interests. Im
not approaching it as an artst Ive come to feel that artsts can have a very narrow point of
view. A lot of the ideas that came out were about art programming. How is art programming
going to help our neighborhood? Thats not what our problem is its not that we dont have
enough art programming- Im concerned about safety Sidewalks, lightng.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Organized the Full Dollar Collecton of Contemporary Art (a sign paintng residency project by
Outpost for Contemporary Art formerly on York, now closed)
York has many diferent artst traditons in its history:
1. sign painters
2. graft artsts
3. chicano art scene from the 1970s on (Ave 50 Studio)
4. NELA Art (long tme residents) Cathy Gallegos
5. In past 8-10 years, the current art scene which includes:
- Artst studios- including internatonal art world fgures (Mike Kelley, Sharon Lockehart)
have their own enclave, but didnt really interact with the community
- cheap studios meant art school students live here
- galleries (Christe Engels, Outpost for Contemporary Art) that were not working with a
community
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Theres a whole range of work on the role of artsts- both conscious and unconscious- and
partcularly real estate interests in sponsoring artsts, consciously knowing that if I rent my space
to an artst its a long term investment in the rent going up in the future.
In Venice real estate brokers sponsor the artwalks, which is a way of getng upper middle class
and upper class folks to visit neighborhoods that they would not otherwise visit.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
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APPENDIX F
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I dont know who is involved in NELA Arts, how many are real estate folks, but its not a
coincidence.
(Stakeholder 1, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
Most of the Highland Park populaton in general [including monolingual Spanish speakers]
are defnitely less concerned with revitalizaton of York. They have regular concerns like any
other resident: schools, educaton, and public safety.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
York Today
Difcult for older businesses to adapt to culture of new
To atract the newer clientele that has more disposable income, everything is so web-based
and a lot of tme to atract the older clienteles you have to go to where people already are, you
know ofer services for Parent Teacher Associatons, donate to the local Chamber of Commerce,
donate to the school rafe.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
There wasnt a natural transiton between the generatons of art people to the people in todays
art community.
Establishing any kind of mult-generatonal art community has been a real challenge in the
neighborhood.
The person whos been the most successful at doing it is Cathy Gallegos at Aveue 50 Studio
because shes doing it along the lines of Latno art which is recognized as the identty that
describes the people in the neighborhood. Its a Latno neighborhood. Because she has
the specifc mission of showing Latno art and supportng Latno artsts, that draws younger
generaton who are interested in partcipatng in that They have a specifc politcal mission.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Businesses were having problems anyway. They were having business problems generally
because they kept changing their name. Ive seen older business owners try to engage in the
revitalizaton, but they dont have the aesthetc cues They dont have the language or branding
of the new. People make valiant atempts, trying to update their interior, their menus.
In small business marketng, especially on a street like York, it becomes a physical marketng
issue. The branding is physical, your marketng is all in your physical structure, the environment
that people can enter into
You can give people all the money or all the support you want in helping them to redecorate
or renovate their business, but theres only so much you can do, you cant tell them to take out
their foors and put in polished concrete.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Daughter at Elsa Bakery had foot in both worlds. There was an informal community that was
almost entrely Latna that was thinking about this and there was also a broader community. The
role of an organized community is to give people like that good optons [for the future].
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
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APPENDIX F
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Certain longtme family businesses were challenged by that evoluton and change and I dont
know if it became an economic [issue] because the next generaton had a diferent value set
than the older.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
Change in businesses is happening organically the neighborhoods character is slowly changing
due to shifing demographics.
(T. Blackman, personal communicaton, November 8, 2012)
Older businesses are sufering in this economy.
(Z. Loera, personal communicaton, November 29, 2012)
York Today
Eyes on the street
Partcularly on York Boulevard theres a lot more economic life that occurs afer regular closing
hours, so you have more people on the street.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
They think its going to be beter for everybody if there is more people day and night. Its true
since the Hermosillo club opened and theres been taco trucks in this block that it feels safer and
nicer and warmer. Its lively and generally a positve vibe out there on the streets, in a way that
it was maybe nothing before now its a litle diferent
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
People are happy that people are out shopping, that they feel safe.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
The idea of community policing [the most recent strategy of the Northeast Police Division],
has had a big impact [on the gang presence] The Northeast Division is commited to building
relatonships with community so people arent afraid to call police when they see something
illegal or wrong.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
I felt very safe in Santa Monica but it was very lifeless. I feel safe here but its not because
theres no one around.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
LAPD has used a new approach locals used to be more afraid of dealing with the cops, now
they have done a lot of community outreach to change that. Also, people are more invested.
(Z. Loera, personal communicaton, November 29, 2012)
Hopefully were just contributng by being a safe, responsible business on the block.
Owner feels very safe around York, regularly walking home alone at 3 am when the street is
deserted, but considers other areas of Highland Park a lot more dangerous.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
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APPENDIX F
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York Today
Purposeful Destnaton
When Caf de Leche opened that was a major turning point, because that established a very
visible public space that was because of the aesthetcs of it, prety well defned to be exclusive
to the creatve class. Its not set up so that people can get together and talk, its set up so that
people can have a work staton for their laptop and have a cup of cofee, with that long layout.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
This isnt really a foot-trafcy kind of place, its more like a destnaton for people who are set
on getng some records.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
People become aware of or curious about the restaurant by foot trafc, and then they look up
restaurant on the internet, or on Yelp.
We get a lot of people from all over LA who are foodies.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
When I used to live of of York I patronized a lot more businesses on York. Right now I dont as
much- none of them are really on my track that much, so if I do come up here, I am coming to
search out a partcular thing like a huarache.
Patronizes businesses because I know what they have.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Worked with a lot of people who were against additonal liquor licenses.
From their perspectve its: Is this a neighborhood or is this a destnaton? If its a
neighborhood where people live objectvely you would be hard pressed to not admit that there
is a drastc over-concentraton of licenses. If youre a business person who makes money of [of
alcohol] either directly or indirectly [or] people who come to drink here, its diferent.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
York Today
Northside vs. Southside
It was the southside Neighborhood Watch that fghts bars like York and Ba
People can come out of the woodwork and make your life hell.
The northside is pro-business, pro-nightlife.
Theres a tug of war between people who want this to be safer and nicer and things going on,
for there to be money in the neighborhood, but I dont think people want it to be Sunset Strip.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Origin of the dog park idea for the Avenue 50 pocket park site was with Caf de Leche crowd
the Latna moms were ofended by the proposal. If were going to get a park, we want a park
for our kids, cause theres not a single park here for kids.
In the end its a queston of who do you serve?
City Council members cant claim ignorance that they dont know what will and wont serve
current residents.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
178
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
[The Latno residents] are actually in a diferent Council District- the boundary shifs on the next
street south of York.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
While the neighborhood is rich in longtme Latno residents that have a rich sense of the
history of the neighborhood and how its changed over tme they exist, theyre around but I
dont see them at the same types of events that I see people from all of these other groups.
I expect the interest of working class Latno families to be diferent from slightly more well to do
business owners.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
York Today
Needs more mixed uses
People come here with their kids or wives or girlfriends or boyfriends and the other person is
bored, [a caf next door] would have been a soluton to that.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
The parklet solved a lot of problems at once, so in the context of the community discussion, it
was successful.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
It would be interestng if people would go in and build higher density residental on York to
really make it a mixture of businesses and people living there There should be a variety of
housing choices, not just single family homes.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
York Today
New businesses encourage friends to open new businesses
Sea and Space gallery opened in 2006 or 2007. It was a graduate from Cal Arts from suburbs of
Cleveland, its speculated that her parents had money.
The resident artst approached the gallery saying, were artsts, maybe we can work on
something together, and the reply was that she was only interested in showing [her] friends
work here.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Encouraged and convinced his friend to open vintage shop on York.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
When an area becomes popular now, it can really turn fast like the arts district Its fairly easy
to research whats a hot neighborhood. [Access to that informaton] draws people in who want
to take advantage of that, who are compatble.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
179
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
York Today
Politcs/ Special Interests
One agenda is families pushing for greenspace.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
A lot of people that have been actve in the community for a long tme, theyve seen the Council
Districts staf change. When theres another electon somebody else comes in, the whole staf
changes, or one key person leaves and the whole history is gone.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Afnity groups in Highland Park:
Historic Highland Park Neighborhood Council
North East Democratc Club
Saving Southwest Museum
Preserving Arroyo Seco
Business Improvement District on Figueroa (business owner)
Ant-710 Freeway Extension Actvists
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
York Today
Stewardship of older businesses
Caf de Leche family has been actve in area for many decades. The building was home to
the fathers insurance business, the son (Michael Nogera), is the president of Chamber of
Commerce, manages the Eagle Rock Farmers Market, and runs a party rental company in Eagle
Rock.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Older residents keep watch on the street.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
180
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
The Future of York
Displacement
Its really important to acknowledge the current residents and the current businesses that have
been here before. [And say] were not looking to get rid of all the party supply stores in Highland
Park.
I think theres room for everyone to change. Cites and policy need to make sure that [people
dont get displaced]. They say a rising tde lifs all, but not in the case of economics, so when
we do see changes occur we need to be sure those people who are vulnerable are protected.
Its hard for communites to come up with community plans that advocate not against
gentrifcaton, but to protect those who are vulnerable.
Learning how to stay put is overall an economic issue because people need to fnd the
resources and job opportunites to stay put.
[Highland Park] has been loosing a lot of working class residents.
The decrease in crime also has to do with people being priced out of their communites- you
had a lot of people that were displaced a lot of people that lef were probably gang members or
families that had gang members in them.
The great recession, you saw a lot of exodus of businesses and vacancies, so it was a ripe
opportunity, once the market started getng beter, for people to move in. The only people that
were able to access any sort of commercial or traditonal loans were people that were probably
not from the community. [These were] people who were able to take advantage of really good
housing stock- people who werent as efected by the downturn in the economy, which is why a
majority of the people who opened the businesses arent from the immediate area.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
I feel very apprehensive because I see a lot of high end businesses coming in more
expensive restaurants, high end design boutques that really cater to people who are solidly
middle class or above who own homes and have families and have disposable income Theres
also a lot of empty spaces for lease and Im really apprehensive about what is going to go into
those spaces. I see that trend of York Boulevard becoming a place that caters to people who are
just from a higher economic bracket.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Afer years of disputes about a leaky roof, the artst was evicted from her studio afer
complaining about a leaking toilet. The absentee landlord sought a signifcantly higher rent from
the new inhabitants.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
Rents go up, people who are rentng get screwed, thats what happens
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
181
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
The city should encourage local building ownership.
When youre having property ownership outside the community it creates a bad
environment for local business owners.
Cites should create an environment in which a suitable business and a suitable lease amount is
negotated with landlord in order to maintain the sweet spot.
You get places like the pet shop that was bought by an upscale Westside Los Angeles frm and
is now charging 8,000/month rent. You have to ask yourself, well what is that going to bring
here?
Im concerned about the directon the street is headed in.
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
Either by good luck or by intent of landlords, businesses got sustainably low rent, but will get
priced out in next phase.
The City should protect small businesses with overlay zone for commercial rent control.
A limited equity housing trust would protect the property for the community.
Theres community interest between the 1st generaton gentrifers and those being gentrifed
because theyre both going to be displaced by the 2nd and 3rd generaton.
The City should consider a commercial rent control overlay zone with the specifc intent of
sustaining neighborhood-serving retail.
Theres a range of other tools that mostly end up being initated by a combinaton of long
tme community residents and newer actvists because its very countercultural to atempt to
intentonally lower value of property in this country, but that is what this is about. You dont
catch a lot of elected ofcials saying I guarantee that I will lower the value of your property.
If your goal was a beter neighborhood for the same neighbors, gentrifcaton doesnt create a
beter neighborhood, it creates a diferent neighborhood. Unless regulated, market forces will
displace people.
You can consciously improve a neighborhood in a way that appeals to current residents but
doesnt appeal to gentrifers. [For instance, provide] more social services that serve the local
neighborhood.
(S. Cancian, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
The displacement of the older generaton of merchants was a challenge. That started
happening about 10+ years ago.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
There is organizing going on in Latno community the longer term renters maybe homeowners
felt like businesses were getng pushed out and didnt like the gentrifcaton aspects. They
complained a lot about the bars and people being loud at night and parking on their street,
getng drunk. There was some organizing, trying to not allow more bars to open... they didnt
want it to become a bar row.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
[A smaller part of the gentrifcaton phenomenon is] atracton: there are elements to
neighborhoods that drive outsiders wantng to come in. When that creates a demand, people
who typically would be able to fnd housing at a reasonable price in the neighborhood suddenly
fnd themselves unable to.
182
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
[Displacement of the renter populaton] worries me because the majority of the most
economically vulnerable residents of Highland Park are renters and they have families- its not
just like yups like myself that are going to be displaced and priced out of the neighborhood
Its not single occupancy residents who are going to get pushed out, its families that wont have
the means to stay in the neighborhood.
(H. Huezo, personal communicaton, March 2, 2013)
Its nice that a lot of the businesses that are coming in are kind of flling in space, rather than
supplantng businesses that were here before.
A friend of mine from college grew up in Highland Park and his parents own their house and
another house Theyre so happy [about the neighborhood changing] because [their home] has
so much more value Now his parents are retring and rentng these places out which I dont
think was an opton before.
Its cool because they stuck with their neighborhood they didnt leave when it got rough and
as it improved theyre reaping the benefts.
(Resident 2, personal communicaton, March 29, 2013)
The Future of York
Volatle neighborhood
Things are cyclical and communites go through peaks and troughs.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Too fancy too fast.
Im worried that its skipping its going from slightly derelict cheapo businesses and skipping
to really fancy without serving the casual purposes of younger people.
(I. Marshall, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
it could go either way
Theres no protecton right now against a 7-11 or a Hooters or a BJs opening up and it could
become like Old Town Pasadena. We dont have that kind of money, so it will never become like
Old Town Pasadena, but we could end up getng the same crappy chains and stuf. Chains just
bleed the money out of a neighborhood and send it to the corporate headquarters.
It would be nice if we could avoid that pitall and just be a nice groovy neighborhood.
(J. Graham, personal communicaton, January 29, 2013)
Its such a small area that just a couple involved people can make such a big diference and if
one of those people leaves or they whole dynamic will change depending on that chemistry of
who is involved.
(Resident 1, personal communicaton, January 27, 2013)
Its almost surreal to be sitng here now
(M. Housseinzadeh, personal communicaton, February 7, 2013)
183
APPENDIX F
Interview Themes
Its the fippers who are the ones [who have caused instability in the neighborhood]. Those
guys have nothing at stake in the community they could give a shit about the community.
Theyre looking for the fast turnaround Here the fipping has started again.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
The Future of York
Established shopping district
It was already in the New York Times magazine as a place to visit.
(C. Pia, personal communicaton, February 15, 2013)
Im really apprehensive about chain stores opening up we havent had any chain [retail] stores
open up on York but theres a lot of potental for that to happen.
(F. Garretson, personal communicaton, February 19, 2013)
The councilman- hell say things like he wants this to be next Colorado Boulevard. But who
wants to live next to Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena? Its a place you go shopping, but unless
youre an young urban professional, you wouldnt really want to live there.
(Stakeholder 1, personal communicaton, February 14, 2013)
It will take another 10 years for it to truly integrate and for there to be a broad enough
appreciaton from the collectve mix- rather than the hip-ness only appealing to oxy or to the
new professionals that are moving in.
(T. Ward, personal communicaton, February 12, 2013)
It could go in diferent directons, it could become a thriving business district I know some
people that envision that it becomes an Old Town Pasadena, where it all looks really slick and
has brand retailers fancy.
(R. Lehman, personal communicaton, February 21, 2013)
Business owner thinks York will keep getng busier and busier theres stll a lot of vacant store
fronts to fll, but hopes it stays small business and doesnt get corporate.
(Business Owner 1, personal communicaton, April 20, 2013)
184
APPENDIX G
Demographic Characteristcs 2000-2010
YORK BL CENSUS DATA
2000
Combined
Tracts
2000
Combined
Percent
2010
Combined
Tracts
2010
Combined
Percent
Percent
Change
Total population 9,024 8843 -2.0%
Male 4,454 49.4% 4397 49.7% 0.4%
Female 4,570 50.6% 4446 50.3% -0.4%
25 to 34 years 1,468 16.3% 1344 15.2% -1.1%
35 to 44 years 1,351 15.0% 1289 14.6% -0.4%
45 to 54 years 1,051 11.6% 1194 13.5% 1.9%
Median age (years) 30 34.275 13.3%
White 3,709 41.1% 3793 42.9% 1.8%
Asian 1,818 20.1% 2022 22.9% 2.7%
Filipino 1,125 12.5% 1483 16.8% 4.3%
White 4,108 45.5% 4145 46.9% 1.4%
Asian 1,912 21.2% 2180 24.7% 3.5%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 5,922 65.6% 5395 61.0% -4.6%
Mexican 4,031 44.7% 3835 43.4% -1.3%
Householder 2,579 28.6% 2716 30.7% 2.1%
Own child under 18 years 2,263 25.1% 1631 18.4% -6.6%
Other relatives 1,246 13.8% 1262 14.3% 0.5%
Total households 2,579 2716 5.3%
Family households (families) 1,995 77.4% 1933 71.2% -6.2%
With own children under 18 years 1,147 44.5% 893 32.9% -11.6%
Married-couple/Husband-Wife family 1,374 53.3% 1241 45.7% -7.6%
With own children under 18 years 839 32.5% 604 22.2% -10.3%
Female householder, no husband present 427 16.6% 465 17.1% 0.6%
Nonfamily households 584 22.6% 783 28.8% 6.2%
Householder living alone 455 77.9% 533 68.1% -9.8%
Households with individuals under 18 years 1,297 50.3% 1083 39.9% -10.4%
Households with individuals 65 years and
over
623 24.2% 679 25.0%
0.8%
Total housing units 2,720 2885 6.1%
Occupied housing units 2,579 94.8% 2716 94.1% -0.7%
Vacant housing units 141 5.2% 169 5.9% 0.7%
Occupied housing units 2,579 2716 5.3%
Owner-occupied housing units 1,329 51.5% 1216 44.8% -6.8%
Renter-occupied housing units 1,250 48.5% 1500 55.2% 6.8%
Average household size of owner-occupied
unit
3.635 3.535
-2.8%
Average household size of renter-occupied
unit
3.385 3.09
-8.7%
RELATIONSHIP
HISPANIC OR LATINO AND RACE
RACE
SEX AND AGE
HOUSING OCCUPANCY
HOUSING TENURE
HOUSEHOLDS BY TYPE