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I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.

author:Huang Jianbo chased the shadow

I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.

Crown Heights was one of Brooklyn's wealthiest neighborhoods at the beginning of the last century, and the alluring architecture of that era, as well as new residential developments, was attracting large numbers of new residents and triggering rapid change.

Crown Heights is home to many museums, as well as its highly anticipated street carnival to Brooklyn's various neighborhoods.

Crown Heights is a neighborhood in the central New York City borough of Brooklyn. Crown Heights is bounded by Washington Avenue to the west, Atlantic Avenue to the north, Ralph Avenue to the east, and Empire Avenue/Eastern New York Avenue to the south. It's about a mile wide and two miles long, and is dotted with churches and restaurants.

In 1991, a young black boy, Gavin Cato, was hit by a car driven by a Hasidic Jewish man and died. Chaos and passion hinder bystanders, families and the media in their search for the truth. Later that same day, a group of disgruntled blacks spotted a Hasidic Jewish man in another part of town and stabbed him several times. The man, Yankel Rosenbaum, from Australia, later died of an epidemic of wounds!

These events sparked a long-standing racial and ethnic antagonism between the Hasidic Jewish community and the Crown Heights community and the surrounding black community.

Now, the community has finally shed that notoriety. In fact, local residents believe that the reconciliation of the two sides after fighting each other was one of the factors that led to the rapid transformation of Crown Heights – it can also be called gentrification, depending on the perspective from which you look at the problem.

In recent years, many shops along Franklin Avenue have been seen with signs that read, "Move to Flatbush." And while long-time residents do not hang signs, there are signs that they are also leaving en masse.

At the same time, new households are pouring into the community of about 140,000.

"The main change in Crown Heights in the last decade is, of course, gentrification," said Nick Juravich, who has lived here for six years and has been a blogger on the "I Love Franklin Avenue" blog until this year. "This community has undergone drastic changes, reflected in the cost of living, housing prices, rent, etc., and at the same time, the face of the commercial street has also changed dramatically."

Many of these changes have occurred in the last two to three years. As developers flock to the roughly 65 blocks around Franklin Avenue in the northwest corner of Crown Heights, more than 20 planned residential projects have emerged, including more than 1,250 apartment units.

These projects are concentrated west of Nostrand Avenue and north of Eastern Parkway.

Some developments include condominiums, a clear sign that the first young, single students and professionals who arrived in the early 19th century are now moving out; In its place came a second, wealthier wave of professionals and families.

Other attractions for developers are the number of abandoned or underutilized industrial buildings in the west of Crown Heights and the large number of brownstone buildings and townhouses in the east, some of which have been designated landmarks. Some developers who used to work on projects in other parts of Brooklyn are now working on Crown Heights. #黃劍博采风追影, #皇氏古建築大全, #JumboHuang, #JumboHeritageList

I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.
I originally planned to go to Little Haiti, but the train derailed halfway, and I could only get off with the black-pressed blacks, and when I walked to the street, the black-pressed black masses really came to the black community.

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