Sunday, August 10, 2008

The more things change...

Via kottke, the New Republic has an article about Chicago's transformation into a European-style (or, for that matter, Latin American-style) central city.

In the past three decades, Chicago has undergone changes that are routinely described as gentrification, but are in fact more complicated and more profound than the process that term suggests. A better description would be "demographic inversion." Chicago is gradually coming to resemble a traditional European city--Vienna or Paris in the nineteenth century, or, for that matter, Paris today. The poor and the newcomers are living on the outskirts. The people who live near the center--some of them black or Hispanic but most of them white--are those who can afford to do so.

My Chicago years coincided with the overhaul of the South Loop. My first month there, a local friend freaked when he learned I'd gone to the Burnham Plaza to watch a movie. Four years later Mrs. Daley was living in a new condo right around the corner; the Burnham is now closed.

Will the new demographics be dynamic, creating physical and financial centripetal motion towards the city center just as newcomers continue to fill the outlying areas? Or will they be static, like the northern suburbs of Paris or the favelas of Rio? Whatever the result, it is likely to be magnified by American racial politics, and that doesn't give much cause for hope. The young professionals now flocking to the central city, after all, are the children and grandchildren of the white middle class that fled to the suburbs during the 1950s. The effects of white flight were disastrous to the Black and Hispanic communities then; the effects of white return are not likely to benefit them now.
 

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Saturday, February 09, 2008

About time

The University of Chicago's superlatively underwhelming home page is about to get a thorough makeover. I can't wait. From the looks of it, the style will be similar to the current Law School page, but more horizontally oriented.

I never wondered who designed the Chicago page because, well, it doesn't seem designed at all. Compare that to Pentagram's work for Brown, or the old Yale website, since replaced by a similar, if slightly more conventional in-house job.

I remember knowing who'd done the old Yale design a few years back. In 1999 it was pretty revolutionary. But as much as I googled, I couldn't find the name of the firm.

Better late than never, I say.
 

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Friday, March 30, 2007

Spoonfeeding

So it's 2am. I just finished writing two recommendation letters, and preparing the student list for the undergraduate housing lottery. As Lou Reed would (more convincingly) say, "I am tired, I am weary. I could sleep for a thousand years."

So what am I doing looking at a Flickr gallery of airline spoons? Beats the hell out of me.
 

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Thursday, November 16, 2006

Milton Friedman (1912-2006)

Milton Friedman has died, at 94. The University of Chicago has an obituary.
 

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Sunday, November 05, 2006

Keep crescating your sententiae

Those old friends of the pilcrow, Will Baude and co. at Crescat Sententia, have been nastilly swindles off their righteous URL but, hardy folks that they are, they've wasted no time setting up a new shop.

So update your links: Crescat Sententia is now at www.crescatsententia.net.

And let the old URL never be mentioned again in these parts.
 

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