Saturday, March 28, 2009

hOOD WOMPS:

Legend: David and family roots


The area is part of the Oakland CA Clawson district, and even city planners refer to it by its canine nickname in official documents. Police pinned the name on the neighborhood because more junkyard dogs lived there than people. That would correspond with a story told by Councilmember Nancy Nadel, who has lived on Helen Street for 23 years. "When I moved there everybody had a dog," she said. "We even had a volunteer dog, a Great Dane. It wasn't our dog, but it ran away from a junkyard and adopted us. He loved our porch, and lived there until he died."

Gentrification - (Displacement)
In West Oakland a community land trust has been formed in an attempt to secure collective non-profit ownership of residentially-zoned land. The Institute for Community Economics has worked to retain West Oakland's longtime residents and mitigate the economic impacts of rent intensification. With some developers interested in a "village community" with the West Oakland BART station as its center, West Oakland has seen an influx of new residents. In response, programs such as the Anti-Displacement Network, have attempted to assist in the stabilization of costs for homeowners and renters in West Oakland. Redevelopment proponents believe such projects under way in West Oakland will provide employment, neighborhood-serving retail health services, recreational facilities, special placement facilities, and new affordable housing... (affordable for whom???)



Legend: being displaced out of Dogtown David and family end up in the "lower bottoms"


The Lower Bottoms (also known as The Bottoms is the informal name of a neighborhood of West Oakland in Oakland, California। The neighborhood boundaries are Mandela Parkway to the east, 7th Street to the south, West Grand Avenue to the north, and the former Oakland Army Base to the west. The neighborhood has suffered from high rates of crime and poverty since the decline of Oakland's industrial economy in the late 20th century. The neighborhood earned its nickname after the construction of the Cypress Freeway in the 1950s that split the West Oakland neighborhood in two and isolated Oakland Point from the remainder of West Oakland.


*In Memory of Davids Brother- Mike who was kill on the edge of Dogtown boardering Ghosttown- '2004

Ghosttown
Ghost Town (sometimes spelled Ghosttown) is the informal name of the Foster Hoover Historic District neighborhood in West Oakland, Oakland, California. The community is known for its violence and blight. The name probably originated from the two casket companies operating side by side on Filbert Street between 30th and 32nd Streets. One of these companies, "American Burial Casket Co" (sign intact) is located at 3102 Filbert Street. The second company was located at 3104 Filbert Street (no signage).[citation needed] Other explanations for the name may have originated in the times when eminent domain forced hundreds of families out of their homes and the town looked like a ghost town. Another anecdote refers to the town as having so many killings it was becoming a ghost town. It stretches from 31st Street to 35th Street in the area immediately southwest of the Macarthur Maze.

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