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	<title>Observer &#187; Brooklyn, The Borough:Escaping Hupsters for New Prospects</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Brooklyn, The Borough:Escaping Hupsters for New Prospects</title>
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		<title>Brooklyn, The Borough:Escaping Hupsters for New Prospects</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2008/01/brooklyn-the-boroughbrescaping-hupsters-for-new-prospectsbr/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jan 2008 15:41:02 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2008/01/brooklyn-the-boroughbrescaping-hupsters-for-new-prospectsbr/</link>
			<dc:creator>Nicole Brydson</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/010308_brownstone_web_0.jpg?w=300&h=147" /><em>Editor's Note: The Real Estate presents </em><strong>Brooklyn, The Borough</strong><em>, a weekly column by </em>Observer<em> staffer and native Manhattanite Nicole Brydson about her return to Brooklyn after nearly a year in Hell's Kitchen.</em>
<p><span>For three years I lived in Greenpoint, the northern Polish colony of Brooklyn.<span>  </span>Though I wasn't part of the first wave of gentrification, the wheels of which were long turning--fast--my indigenous neighbors didn't necessarily seem thrilled with the influx of youthful college graduates.<span>  </span>But, over the time I spent living there, the process completed itself.<span>  </span>Greenpoint, close to Williamsburg and now home to hip bars, natural markets, galleries, brunch spots, fashion-forward boutiques and even a book store, became the convenient and affordable </span><em><span style="font-size: 13pt">choix de la jeunesse</span></em><span style="font-size: 13pt">.</span><span> </span>    </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>When I had to move out of my lovely floor-through one-bedroom on a quiet tree-lined street last spring, I began to consider what Brooklyn neighborhood I might embark on next.<span>  </span>I was outgrowing Greenpoint's 22-24 crowd--a new crop of whom seemed to lay roots every year after graduation, forcing up prices--and the drunken Polish men cat-calling me on the way to the G train.<span>   </span>Williamsburg, with a slightly older demographic thanks to unattainable rents, was out of my league.<span>  </span>And the unkempt demographic--the huptser (Hip Urban Professional) as my friends and I like to refer to them--began to procreate.<span>  </span>Though the 'burg isn't quite the pretentious mommy-daddy colony that is Park Slope--yet--I'm still young enough to resent even minimal stroller traffic.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Fort Greene seemed just about perfect--full of late 20s/early 30s professionals and creative types--and thankfully far fewer babies.<span>  </span>With its Cosby-esque brownstones, rising rent and enormous competition for apartments it was just out of reach.<span>  </span>One two-bedroom apartment--decently priced at $1,350--on Clifton Place was newly restored, but tiny--the living room was more like a dead-end hallway--and competition for a cheap place on a brownstone-lined block was steep.<span>  </span>Neighboring Clinton Hill was decent enough, but once again I would have found myself surrounded by college types (from nearby Pratt) and on the G train--aptly dubbed the &quot;ghost train&quot; for it's tardiness.<span>  </span>Since I'm often out late, I wasn't ready to reacquaint myself with the only major train line in the city that doesn't ferry passengers into Manhattan.<span>  </span>I needed a demographic that suited my maturity, with an express train nearby.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>I considered the up-and-coming areas--that is, up-and-coming for white gentrifiers--like Bedford Stuyvesant, Lefferts Gardens and the area of Flatbush that surrounds the southern tip of Prospect Park, full of enormous and relatively cheap brownstone and pre-war apartments, but I deemed them still a bit too unsafe.<span>  </span>I considered Bushwick as well, and went to see a newly renovated first-floor apartment with a backyard for $1,600 off the DeKalb L stop.<span>  </span>The amenities were great--two bathrooms, brand-new fixtures--but adjacent from my potential backyard was another full of barking pit bulls, clearly protecting the inhabitant's questionable activity.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>I had fallen for Prospect Heights.<span>  </span>Just far enough away from the stroller alleys of the Slope, but still close enough to enjoy their amenities, including the Q express train as well as Prospect Park, the Brooklyn Museum and Botanic Gardens.<span>  </span>The gorgeous brownstone-lined streets, I feared, would also be out of my price range.<span>  </span>Very much a member of our city's creative underclass, I didn't want to get locked out of the borough that I had fallen in love with since returning from college to find myself exiled from my home borough of Manhattan.<span>  </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>I scoured Craigslist ads for the area, hoping that some little dump would be waiting for me to show it the love and attention it deserved.<span>  </span>I had a roommate lined up with the same price range, and after the tiny apartment in Fort Greene had fallen through, our hearts were broken, but we continued our search.</span> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>The first place I had seen in the area, a big two-bedroom for $1,450--a steal!--was dirty, had uneven floors, and hovered above what is formerly one of Washington Avenue's most frequented fried chicken spots--not to mention a wall in the living room was covered in '70's era beveled glass.<span>  </span>I hesitated.<span>  </span>But upon a second visit I saw it's potential: big rooms and an enormous outdoor space just beyond the kitchen window.<span>  </span>All it needed was a good scrubbing and a few amenities from the Home Depot.<span>  </span>I was sold.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Unlike the previous areas I had visited, Prospect Heights is a very evenly mixed neighborhood of different ethnicities, families, professionals, and young people.<span>  </span>I didn't feel ostracized by my neighbors, and since taking over my new apartment this month, people have actually said hello to me on the street.<span>  </span>Now I'll embark on finding my neighborhood's gems--Soda, a nearby bar on Vanderbilt Avenue, and Chevella's, authentic Mexican on Classon Avenue--are my first scheduled stops.<span>  </span>That is, once I finish cleaning, painting and organizing my little box in the sky.</span></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/010308_brownstone_web_0.jpg?w=300&h=147" /><em>Editor's Note: The Real Estate presents </em><strong>Brooklyn, The Borough</strong><em>, a weekly column by </em>Observer<em> staffer and native Manhattanite Nicole Brydson about her return to Brooklyn after nearly a year in Hell's Kitchen.</em>
<p><span>For three years I lived in Greenpoint, the northern Polish colony of Brooklyn.<span>  </span>Though I wasn't part of the first wave of gentrification, the wheels of which were long turning--fast--my indigenous neighbors didn't necessarily seem thrilled with the influx of youthful college graduates.<span>  </span>But, over the time I spent living there, the process completed itself.<span>  </span>Greenpoint, close to Williamsburg and now home to hip bars, natural markets, galleries, brunch spots, fashion-forward boutiques and even a book store, became the convenient and affordable </span><em><span style="font-size: 13pt">choix de la jeunesse</span></em><span style="font-size: 13pt">.</span><span> </span>    </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>When I had to move out of my lovely floor-through one-bedroom on a quiet tree-lined street last spring, I began to consider what Brooklyn neighborhood I might embark on next.<span>  </span>I was outgrowing Greenpoint's 22-24 crowd--a new crop of whom seemed to lay roots every year after graduation, forcing up prices--and the drunken Polish men cat-calling me on the way to the G train.<span>   </span>Williamsburg, with a slightly older demographic thanks to unattainable rents, was out of my league.<span>  </span>And the unkempt demographic--the huptser (Hip Urban Professional) as my friends and I like to refer to them--began to procreate.<span>  </span>Though the 'burg isn't quite the pretentious mommy-daddy colony that is Park Slope--yet--I'm still young enough to resent even minimal stroller traffic.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Fort Greene seemed just about perfect--full of late 20s/early 30s professionals and creative types--and thankfully far fewer babies.<span>  </span>With its Cosby-esque brownstones, rising rent and enormous competition for apartments it was just out of reach.<span>  </span>One two-bedroom apartment--decently priced at $1,350--on Clifton Place was newly restored, but tiny--the living room was more like a dead-end hallway--and competition for a cheap place on a brownstone-lined block was steep.<span>  </span>Neighboring Clinton Hill was decent enough, but once again I would have found myself surrounded by college types (from nearby Pratt) and on the G train--aptly dubbed the &quot;ghost train&quot; for it's tardiness.<span>  </span>Since I'm often out late, I wasn't ready to reacquaint myself with the only major train line in the city that doesn't ferry passengers into Manhattan.<span>  </span>I needed a demographic that suited my maturity, with an express train nearby.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>I considered the up-and-coming areas--that is, up-and-coming for white gentrifiers--like Bedford Stuyvesant, Lefferts Gardens and the area of Flatbush that surrounds the southern tip of Prospect Park, full of enormous and relatively cheap brownstone and pre-war apartments, but I deemed them still a bit too unsafe.<span>  </span>I considered Bushwick as well, and went to see a newly renovated first-floor apartment with a backyard for $1,600 off the DeKalb L stop.<span>  </span>The amenities were great--two bathrooms, brand-new fixtures--but adjacent from my potential backyard was another full of barking pit bulls, clearly protecting the inhabitant's questionable activity.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>I had fallen for Prospect Heights.<span>  </span>Just far enough away from the stroller alleys of the Slope, but still close enough to enjoy their amenities, including the Q express train as well as Prospect Park, the Brooklyn Museum and Botanic Gardens.<span>  </span>The gorgeous brownstone-lined streets, I feared, would also be out of my price range.<span>  </span>Very much a member of our city's creative underclass, I didn't want to get locked out of the borough that I had fallen in love with since returning from college to find myself exiled from my home borough of Manhattan.<span>  </span></span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>I scoured Craigslist ads for the area, hoping that some little dump would be waiting for me to show it the love and attention it deserved.<span>  </span>I had a roommate lined up with the same price range, and after the tiny apartment in Fort Greene had fallen through, our hearts were broken, but we continued our search.</span> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>The first place I had seen in the area, a big two-bedroom for $1,450--a steal!--was dirty, had uneven floors, and hovered above what is formerly one of Washington Avenue's most frequented fried chicken spots--not to mention a wall in the living room was covered in '70's era beveled glass.<span>  </span>I hesitated.<span>  </span>But upon a second visit I saw it's potential: big rooms and an enormous outdoor space just beyond the kitchen window.<span>  </span>All it needed was a good scrubbing and a few amenities from the Home Depot.<span>  </span>I was sold.</span></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><span>Unlike the previous areas I had visited, Prospect Heights is a very evenly mixed neighborhood of different ethnicities, families, professionals, and young people.<span>  </span>I didn't feel ostracized by my neighbors, and since taking over my new apartment this month, people have actually said hello to me on the street.<span>  </span>Now I'll embark on finding my neighborhood's gems--Soda, a nearby bar on Vanderbilt Avenue, and Chevella's, authentic Mexican on Classon Avenue--are my first scheduled stops.<span>  </span>That is, once I finish cleaning, painting and organizing my little box in the sky.</span></p>
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