Suddenly Channeling Lewis Black
Apr. 28th, 2008 10:05 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I won't say that the 500 block of Pine Street was paradise, but they did pave it and put up a parking lot.
For those of you unfamiliar with the neighborhood, the north side of the street between Belmont and Summit used to house the Kincora Pub, the Man Ray, Cha Cha, the Bus Stop, and Bimbo's Burritos--an Irish pub, a gay bar, a coupla dives, and a kind of ... kitschy Mexican Goth joint*.
Then some genius decided that what the neighborhood really needed were more condos. Because, you know, you can never have enough overpriced McMatchboxes for people to come home to after a long day at the cubicle.
So they booted all of the aforementioned swingin' hotspots out of there and razed everything to the ground.
I guess that plan seemed a whole lot less clever when the bottom fell out of the housing market.**
Absent any other immediate way of making a buck off of the property, they've now hit on the idea of charging people to park where they used to want to go.
I'm not bitter. The old block had lots of character, but I've moved on--literally. Hell, my new place is almost on Broadway, so it's not like it's ever gonna be boring.
Still, I sorta hope that the developers lose their shirts on this one.
*Bimbo's actually lives on in a somewhat more yuppified version over on Pike Street, which is I guess some consolation.
**OK, apparently it wasn't the housing market; it was ... cornices. See comments.
For those of you unfamiliar with the neighborhood, the north side of the street between Belmont and Summit used to house the Kincora Pub, the Man Ray, Cha Cha, the Bus Stop, and Bimbo's Burritos--an Irish pub, a gay bar, a coupla dives, and a kind of ... kitschy Mexican Goth joint*.
Then some genius decided that what the neighborhood really needed were more condos. Because, you know, you can never have enough overpriced McMatchboxes for people to come home to after a long day at the cubicle.
So they booted all of the aforementioned swingin' hotspots out of there and razed everything to the ground.
I guess that plan seemed a whole lot less clever when the bottom fell out of the housing market.**
Absent any other immediate way of making a buck off of the property, they've now hit on the idea of charging people to park where they used to want to go.
I'm not bitter. The old block had lots of character, but I've moved on--literally. Hell, my new place is almost on Broadway, so it's not like it's ever gonna be boring.
Still, I sorta hope that the developers lose their shirts on this one.
*Bimbo's actually lives on in a somewhat more yuppified version over on Pike Street, which is I guess some consolation.
**OK, apparently it wasn't the housing market; it was ... cornices. See comments.