A Recipe for Gentrification. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

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      Savior Entrepreneurs and Demon Developers

       The Role of Gourmet Restaurants and Bars in the Redevelopment of Durham

      NINA MARTIN

      In 2013, Southern Living Magazine chose an unlikely candidate as its “tastiest town” in the South: Durham, North Carolina. Known for its depiction in the film, Bull Durham (1988), where minor league baseball players fight for their future in the gritty tobacco town, Durham beat out New Orleans, Charleston, Atlanta, and other well-known “foodie” cities. The city’s culinary offerings have been widely celebrated in such publications as Vogue (2017), Bon Appétit (2016), and the New York Times (2013, 2017), which notes that Durham’s emergence as a food city paralleled the regeneration of its downtown area. Indeed, until 15 years ago Durham’s deindustrialized city center had many empty storefronts, abandoned tobacco warehouses, and depopulated streets. But visit Durham today and you can experience the following itinerary: Begin your day at an independent coffee shop by enjoying drinks made with single-origin beans, then walk over to the farmers’ market where you will find locally grown organic produce, snag lunch at a food truck that specializes in culturally hybrid street foods from around the world, shop at boutiques and art galleries with curated collections, have dinner at a farm-to-table restaurant, wrap up the night at a craft brewery specializing in old-world beers, and return to your boutique hotel where you can indulge in a craft cocktail in the lobby bar. Eating and drinking define the downtown Durham experience.

      In the current phase of urbanism, gourmet restaurants and bars are not just about feeding people, creating jobs, or earning money for their owners and investors. Restaurants have symbolic value in shaping a city’s image and signaling the kind of people who live there and the values they hold. Restaurants may be the contemporary version of the museums and concert halls built by American captains of industry in the nineteenth century: They demonstrate the cultural aspirations of residents and their purported global connectivity. Gourmet restaurants then hold an exalted place in the retail ecology of urban areas competing for a foothold in the service-sector economy. The values of city residents can be symbolized by the food they eat: A plethora of restaurants serving fair, local, and organic foods, for example, can be inferred to mean that this community is progressive, open-minded, and ethical.1 Namely, the characteristics that cities must possess to attract creative class workers and employers.

      Cities have long been in fierce competition to attract footloose capital to create jobs, build infrastructure, and invest in arts and culture. City and state relocation assistance in the form of tax breaks, free or low-cost land, and workforce development are still commonly used to attract business. While this approach to economic development continues apace, cities increasingly compete to attract