"120 Ninth" is clean, sterile, and as beige as it gets. The perfect color for our increasingly monotone town.
Here's how it looked a couple months ago, with the marketing banner spread across it, complete with images of the sort of soulless, cookie-cutter businesses that the developer hopes to attract.
It doesn't get more blah than this.
Here's how it looked when it was still alive, a colorful jumble of authenticity and originality, of humanity.
These lost businesses provided vital functions for the local community. A dry cleaners and tailor shop, a wonderful barber shop that gave shelter to the homeless, bodegas where kids could go when in trouble, the Sweet Banana Candy store with its empanada lady and everything--all of them run by local, independent business people with deep ties to the community. People fought to save them, but the people failed.
All of them were evicted--by the same company that pushed out Colony Music for $5 million per month. A special place in Hell most certainly awaits.
Here's the whole story of what happened here:
Death of a Block
Death of a Block 2
Death of a Block 3
Death of a Block 4
Saving 9th Avenue
Sweet Banana Candy Store
New Barber Shop
Chelsea Liquors
New China
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