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	<title>Observer &#187; Deirdre Shaw</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Deirdre Shaw</title>
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		<title>The Devil Came Down to Soho</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/02/the-devil-came-down-to-soho/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Feb 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/02/the-devil-came-down-to-soho/</link>
			<dc:creator>Deirdre Shaw</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>The mimeographed note had been taped to the door of my Soho</p>
<p>apartment building for almost a week, calling all neighbors to a community</p>
<p>meeting to discuss the hotel being built down the block. "It is important to</p>
<p>show up in large numbers to make sure the hotel and restaurant owners take us</p>
<p>seriously," said the flier, trying to guilt us into coming. Well, it got me.</p>
<p>Plus, I was interested in getting involved in my new community, where I had</p>
<p>moved two months earlier from midtown. I imagined getting to know some of my</p>
<p>neighbors, and soon I was fantasizing about having them over for coffee,</p>
<p>meeting for drinks at Raoul's ….</p>
<p> So on Jan. 9, I left work early to attend the 6 p.m. meeting</p>
<p>at 60 Thompson (which is also the hotel's name). I hurried down my block to</p>
<p>catch up with a neighbor. I had seen him around; he was probably in his 60's,</p>
<p>with longish white hair. He was grouchy and never said hello back. Here,</p>
<p>finally, was my chance to get to know him.</p>
<p> "Heading to the meeting?" I asked bravely.</p>
<p> He glanced at me and grumbled, "Yes. And expecting the</p>
<p>worst: cars, traffic …."</p>
<p> "Noise," I added with an eager nod.</p>
<p> Upon arriving, we climbed a dusty flight of paint-splattered</p>
<p>steps to the large reception area, which was still under construction. Two</p>
<p>elderly women with brightly dyed hair dunked cookies into cups of coffee while</p>
<p>an attractive young man in a turtleneck sweater and a blond woman with artfully</p>
<p>tousled hair looked on. It wasn't hard to tell the hoteliers from the</p>
<p>hotel-haters.</p>
<p> The meeting was never</p>
<p>called to order; it just sort of started, with two 30-ish neighborhood women</p>
<p>lobbing questions to the hotelier, Jason Pomeranc: "How many rooms will there</p>
<p>be?" Around 100; it's a very small boutique hotel and restaurant, marketed to</p>
<p>an upscale clientele, he explained. The women smiled flirtily at Mr.</p>
<p>Pomeranc-perhaps, like me, envisioning evenings at the bar and dinner dates at</p>
<p>the restaurant, Café Nacionale ($65 a head for dinner, with some outdoor</p>
<p>seating). And so it went for the first few moments. It was all very civilized,</p>
<p>even informative.</p>
<p> I was surprised.</p>
<p> As a former newspaper reporter, I had covered plenty of</p>
<p>community meetings. I knew that the angry people always came. I had written</p>
<p>about places where good people had good reasons to protest horrible circumstances, including corruption, inept</p>
<p>politicians, rat-infested homes, a strip club opening in a residential</p>
<p>neighborhood, as well as incidents as ugly as a seventh-grade girl sexually</p>
<p>molested by her classmates on a school bus. But I also knew that there were</p>
<p>people who came to public meetings just to hear themselves talk. And then there</p>
<p>were those who resisted change. Even in neighborhoods designated as rural and</p>
<p>protected from most development, some came to kvetch about minor alterations,</p>
<p>such as crumbling stonewalls that had been repaired to look "too mended." I</p>
<p>quickly learned which stories were worth telling.</p>
<p> I had suspected that the</p>
<p>opening of a small hotel in Soho was not a story, but I anticipated at least</p>
<p>mild controversy. Sensing none initially, I was proud of my neighbors. They</p>
<p>appeared to realize that the project was worth investigating, but not</p>
<p>castigating. They seemed like reasonable people who recognized that communities</p>
<p>are ever-changing, made up of people with conflicting goals and ideals who</p>
<p>nevertheless learn to live together.</p>
<p> I was wrong. The docile scene lasted all of 10 minutes.</p>
<p>Before I knew it, the grouchy man from my block had pounced on one of the</p>
<p>restaurateurs.</p>
<p> "You're not trying to improve this neighborhood. You don't</p>
<p>care about this neighborhood. And you want us to eat your cookies ?"</p>
<p> Crestfallen, I said "Uh oh" loud enough to make some people</p>
<p>turn and look. The fracas had begun. People edged closer to the hoteliers as</p>
<p>more locals arrived.</p>
<p> A woman called for calm.</p>
<p>She started telling a drawn-out story about a hotel in Brooklyn that, when</p>
<p>faced with protests, agreed to allow neighborhood children to use the pool.</p>
<p>"Maybe we could work out something like that," she said. "I don't know if</p>
<p>there's a pool here, but …"</p>
<p> Then they started being mean to each other. When a woman</p>
<p>interrupted the boring pool tale, a man interrupted her.</p>
<p> " Excuse me," he</p>
<p>said in a dizzyingly self-righteous tone-a plea that would soon become the</p>
<p>evening's refrain-"but she was talking. Please let her continue without</p>
<p>interrupting."</p>
<p> Excuse me , but a</p>
<p>small upscale hotel and café? It's not a homeless shelter. Had any of these</p>
<p>people ever lived across from a public high school in New York City? Come</p>
<p>complain to me then.</p>
<p> I understand that many</p>
<p>of the people present had lived in the neighborhood for years-even decades-and</p>
<p>saw the hotel as one more agonizing sign of the area's appeal to obnoxious</p>
<p>strangers "standing outside, yakking on their cell phones at one in the</p>
<p>morning," as one woman put it. Of course, I happen to be one of the people they</p>
<p>probably hate to see moving in. I work for an Internet company. I pay too much</p>
<p>for a small studio. I eat at trendy restaurants. And since the hotel's</p>
<p>restaurant will be run by the same people who started Indochine and Bond</p>
<p>Street-um, yeah , it's likely I'll be</p>
<p>a patron, cell phone and all.</p>
<p> The hotel people and the restaurateurs seemed honest and</p>
<p>decent. They said that they had a refrigerated area to house the garbage until</p>
<p>the haulers came, to keep the rats away. They promised that the outdoor seating</p>
<p>would be closed by midnight. They told us that they intend to plant birch trees</p>
<p>in front and would try to time their deliveries and guests' arrivals so they</p>
<p>didn't coincide and block the street.</p>
<p> But my neighbors acted</p>
<p>so put-upon and outraged, they could have been an army of Erin</p>
<p>Brockoviches-except they were lacking any pitiful tale, and no one was trying</p>
<p>to fool them.</p>
<p> They were a wild band of NIMBY vigilantes, the type of</p>
<p>obnoxious white liberals who wear berets and ponytails and feel it's their duty to protest anything trendy, which they were</p>
<p>above, or anything that makes money, which they were apparently also above.</p>
<p> They shook their heads</p>
<p>and exchanged knowing smirks of disbelief that anyone could be that</p>
<p>money-hungry, that anyone could actually construct a small, trendy hotel and</p>
<p>restaurant on a block full of small, trendy shops and restaurants. They said</p>
<p>they couldn't live with the garbage trucks and the traffic and the noise. When</p>
<p>they were rude, they prefaced themselves with, "The reason you're meeting with</p>
<p>so much hostility here is because our bedroom windows are right on the street</p>
<p>…."</p>
<p> I turned and left, hoping my departure would send a signal</p>
<p>that at least one resident didn't mind the hotel. I walked home disappointed,</p>
<p>my visions of neighborly chats disappearing, my civics experiment failed. It</p>
<p>seems that to my neighbors, I am as much an outsider and opponent as the</p>
<p>hoteliers. As I turned my cell phone back on, I could imagine them muttering to</p>
<p>themselves: With neighbors like her, who needs enemies?</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The mimeographed note had been taped to the door of my Soho</p>
<p>apartment building for almost a week, calling all neighbors to a community</p>
<p>meeting to discuss the hotel being built down the block. "It is important to</p>
<p>show up in large numbers to make sure the hotel and restaurant owners take us</p>
<p>seriously," said the flier, trying to guilt us into coming. Well, it got me.</p>
<p>Plus, I was interested in getting involved in my new community, where I had</p>
<p>moved two months earlier from midtown. I imagined getting to know some of my</p>
<p>neighbors, and soon I was fantasizing about having them over for coffee,</p>
<p>meeting for drinks at Raoul's ….</p>
<p> So on Jan. 9, I left work early to attend the 6 p.m. meeting</p>
<p>at 60 Thompson (which is also the hotel's name). I hurried down my block to</p>
<p>catch up with a neighbor. I had seen him around; he was probably in his 60's,</p>
<p>with longish white hair. He was grouchy and never said hello back. Here,</p>
<p>finally, was my chance to get to know him.</p>
<p> "Heading to the meeting?" I asked bravely.</p>
<p> He glanced at me and grumbled, "Yes. And expecting the</p>
<p>worst: cars, traffic …."</p>
<p> "Noise," I added with an eager nod.</p>
<p> Upon arriving, we climbed a dusty flight of paint-splattered</p>
<p>steps to the large reception area, which was still under construction. Two</p>
<p>elderly women with brightly dyed hair dunked cookies into cups of coffee while</p>
<p>an attractive young man in a turtleneck sweater and a blond woman with artfully</p>
<p>tousled hair looked on. It wasn't hard to tell the hoteliers from the</p>
<p>hotel-haters.</p>
<p> The meeting was never</p>
<p>called to order; it just sort of started, with two 30-ish neighborhood women</p>
<p>lobbing questions to the hotelier, Jason Pomeranc: "How many rooms will there</p>
<p>be?" Around 100; it's a very small boutique hotel and restaurant, marketed to</p>
<p>an upscale clientele, he explained. The women smiled flirtily at Mr.</p>
<p>Pomeranc-perhaps, like me, envisioning evenings at the bar and dinner dates at</p>
<p>the restaurant, Café Nacionale ($65 a head for dinner, with some outdoor</p>
<p>seating). And so it went for the first few moments. It was all very civilized,</p>
<p>even informative.</p>
<p> I was surprised.</p>
<p> As a former newspaper reporter, I had covered plenty of</p>
<p>community meetings. I knew that the angry people always came. I had written</p>
<p>about places where good people had good reasons to protest horrible circumstances, including corruption, inept</p>
<p>politicians, rat-infested homes, a strip club opening in a residential</p>
<p>neighborhood, as well as incidents as ugly as a seventh-grade girl sexually</p>
<p>molested by her classmates on a school bus. But I also knew that there were</p>
<p>people who came to public meetings just to hear themselves talk. And then there</p>
<p>were those who resisted change. Even in neighborhoods designated as rural and</p>
<p>protected from most development, some came to kvetch about minor alterations,</p>
<p>such as crumbling stonewalls that had been repaired to look "too mended." I</p>
<p>quickly learned which stories were worth telling.</p>
<p> I had suspected that the</p>
<p>opening of a small hotel in Soho was not a story, but I anticipated at least</p>
<p>mild controversy. Sensing none initially, I was proud of my neighbors. They</p>
<p>appeared to realize that the project was worth investigating, but not</p>
<p>castigating. They seemed like reasonable people who recognized that communities</p>
<p>are ever-changing, made up of people with conflicting goals and ideals who</p>
<p>nevertheless learn to live together.</p>
<p> I was wrong. The docile scene lasted all of 10 minutes.</p>
<p>Before I knew it, the grouchy man from my block had pounced on one of the</p>
<p>restaurateurs.</p>
<p> "You're not trying to improve this neighborhood. You don't</p>
<p>care about this neighborhood. And you want us to eat your cookies ?"</p>
<p> Crestfallen, I said "Uh oh" loud enough to make some people</p>
<p>turn and look. The fracas had begun. People edged closer to the hoteliers as</p>
<p>more locals arrived.</p>
<p> A woman called for calm.</p>
<p>She started telling a drawn-out story about a hotel in Brooklyn that, when</p>
<p>faced with protests, agreed to allow neighborhood children to use the pool.</p>
<p>"Maybe we could work out something like that," she said. "I don't know if</p>
<p>there's a pool here, but …"</p>
<p> Then they started being mean to each other. When a woman</p>
<p>interrupted the boring pool tale, a man interrupted her.</p>
<p> " Excuse me," he</p>
<p>said in a dizzyingly self-righteous tone-a plea that would soon become the</p>
<p>evening's refrain-"but she was talking. Please let her continue without</p>
<p>interrupting."</p>
<p> Excuse me , but a</p>
<p>small upscale hotel and café? It's not a homeless shelter. Had any of these</p>
<p>people ever lived across from a public high school in New York City? Come</p>
<p>complain to me then.</p>
<p> I understand that many</p>
<p>of the people present had lived in the neighborhood for years-even decades-and</p>
<p>saw the hotel as one more agonizing sign of the area's appeal to obnoxious</p>
<p>strangers "standing outside, yakking on their cell phones at one in the</p>
<p>morning," as one woman put it. Of course, I happen to be one of the people they</p>
<p>probably hate to see moving in. I work for an Internet company. I pay too much</p>
<p>for a small studio. I eat at trendy restaurants. And since the hotel's</p>
<p>restaurant will be run by the same people who started Indochine and Bond</p>
<p>Street-um, yeah , it's likely I'll be</p>
<p>a patron, cell phone and all.</p>
<p> The hotel people and the restaurateurs seemed honest and</p>
<p>decent. They said that they had a refrigerated area to house the garbage until</p>
<p>the haulers came, to keep the rats away. They promised that the outdoor seating</p>
<p>would be closed by midnight. They told us that they intend to plant birch trees</p>
<p>in front and would try to time their deliveries and guests' arrivals so they</p>
<p>didn't coincide and block the street.</p>
<p> But my neighbors acted</p>
<p>so put-upon and outraged, they could have been an army of Erin</p>
<p>Brockoviches-except they were lacking any pitiful tale, and no one was trying</p>
<p>to fool them.</p>
<p> They were a wild band of NIMBY vigilantes, the type of</p>
<p>obnoxious white liberals who wear berets and ponytails and feel it's their duty to protest anything trendy, which they were</p>
<p>above, or anything that makes money, which they were apparently also above.</p>
<p> They shook their heads</p>
<p>and exchanged knowing smirks of disbelief that anyone could be that</p>
<p>money-hungry, that anyone could actually construct a small, trendy hotel and</p>
<p>restaurant on a block full of small, trendy shops and restaurants. They said</p>
<p>they couldn't live with the garbage trucks and the traffic and the noise. When</p>
<p>they were rude, they prefaced themselves with, "The reason you're meeting with</p>
<p>so much hostility here is because our bedroom windows are right on the street</p>
<p>…."</p>
<p> I turned and left, hoping my departure would send a signal</p>
<p>that at least one resident didn't mind the hotel. I walked home disappointed,</p>
<p>my visions of neighborly chats disappearing, my civics experiment failed. It</p>
<p>seems that to my neighbors, I am as much an outsider and opponent as the</p>
<p>hoteliers. As I turned my cell phone back on, I could imagine them muttering to</p>
<p>themselves: With neighbors like her, who needs enemies?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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