Alamo Square/Divisadero: The new "It" 'hood
The SF Weekly may think it's the heart of the new "It" neighborhood in SF, but, between Turk St. and Haight St., Divisadero St. has a lot of empty storefronts. If we're so cool, why is that?
Michael Ondaatje ("The English Patient") has done his part by putting our neighborhood on the literary map with his new novel, "Divisadero."
On the other hand, Cafe Abir, the social heart of the neighborhood at Fulton and Divisadero, has been closed for weeks to those who like to start the day with a cup of Draino-strength coffee and the daily newspapers, as Abir does some remodeling behind the opaqued plate glass windows. We hope they don't ruin that special space with some misguided "improvements."
On the other hand, Cafe Abir, the social heart of the neighborhood at Fulton and Divisadero, has been closed for weeks to those who like to start the day with a cup of Draino-strength coffee and the daily newspapers, as Abir does some remodeling behind the opaqued plate glass windows. We hope they don't ruin that special space with some misguided "improvements."
And then there's the Harding Theater. A few years ago, David Tornheim and his Central City Progressives went to great lengths to save this derelict, architecturally undistinguished, commercially unviable eyesore of a building. Now, as Supervisor Mirkarimi feared at the time, it's still a big blight on the neighborhood, another hollow symbolic victory for city progs.
Labels: District 5, Divisadero, Harding Theater, Neighborhoods
4 Comments:
Whenever a neighborhood gets one of those NYC acronyms (SoHo, TriBeCa, etc) you know the end is near. Soon "NoPa" will sport the bicycle shops, which was the harbinger of Valencia Street's hipster yuppification. It's just a matter of time for Divis.
The irony of course is that the kind of people waiting in line outside of Boogaloos at Val/22nd are all griping about the "Yuppies" moving in and ruining the neighborhood, never realizing that they are talking about themselves
Yes, a bike shop would be a bad sign, as would one of those chic shoe stores like those on Haight St. But we're a long way from that on Diviz, which is a good/bad thing, I suppose.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but there's already a bike shop there. What's even worse is it's a bike shop/cafe!!! What could possible be more 'hipster' than that!
Here we come!
There goes the neighborhood.
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