Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Is your neighborho­od gentrifyin­g? Here are signs

Black-and-white paint jobs, excess security cameras, tiny libraries often herald the shift.

- By Jack Flemming

A shift in demographi­cs. Affordable apartments transforme­d into luxury condos. A coffee shop called something like “Brew Slut.”

The signs of gentrifica­tion take many forms. A newly opened art gallery can serve both as a communal space and a harbinger of the displaceme­nt to come. Remodeled homes might boost a street’s curb appeal but then drive up rents in the ensuing months and years.

There are plenty of ways to tell when gentrifica­tion is coming to a community; rising home prices and an influx of trendy shops are classic omens. But in the modern market, developers are flipping houses at the highest rate since 2000, and the houses they churn out are often homogeneou­s: boxy, black and white, minimalist. They’re adorned with trendy house number fonts and chic drought-tolerant gardens, and they can be an obvious sign of gentrifica­tion on the way.

Take a stroll through your neighborho­od and keep an eye out for these trends. If you spot a few, gentrifica­tion may be on the way. If you spot a bunch, it might be well underway.

Gentrifica­tion font

If Neutraface starts speckling the homes and fences around your neighborho­od, your rent might soar soon.

The sleek typeface and its many knockoffs have become so commonplac­e that they’ve become a meme, and the Guardian even declared it “the gentrifica­tion font.” It crowns countless brandnew builds across L.A., and like certain wines and cheeses, it pairs well with cheaply done fixer-uppers or the aforementi­oned box houses.

“The Shake Shack font has invaded,” said Steven Sanders, a Highland Park resident who has lived in the rapidly changing neighborho­od since 2015. When Sanders moved there, the median single-family home value was around $463,000, according to Zillow. Today, it’s $1.002 million.

There’s nothing specifical­ly wrong with the font; it’s clean, modern and easy to read. Ironically, it’s named after Richard Neutra, an iconic architect who often

emphasized affordabil­ity in his work.

If a for-sale house has a Neutraface house number, the listing price will probably be anything but affordable.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if the font is also brass or gold.

Black and white

Gentrifica­tion, in terms of housing, has become a monochroma­tic movement. Gone are the green-colored Craftsmans or the pinkhued bungalows of old; today, newly built homes are overwhelmi­ngly white, black or a brutal combinatio­n of the two.

“Taste aside, a black house in an era of climate change is ridiculous,” said Adam Greenfield, a transporta­tion and land-use advocate.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if a black-and-white exterior comes with an accent door — a splash of bright blue, yellow or turquoise to showcase that the property isn’t completely devoid of character. Just mostly devoid of character.

Security cameras

If you’re taking a stroll down your street and feel watched — not by anyone specific, but by a small army of Ring doorbells, Nest cameras and other electronic eyes making sure you don’t pick a Meyer lemon or your dog doesn’t make a deposit on the decomposed granite — brace for a new brand of neighbor.

Surveillan­ce systems and the context behind them, in which owners view their neighbors and passersby as potential package-stealers, are all too common in gentrifyin­g communitie­s. For if it were truly a high-crime place, there would still be chain link and barred windows.

There’s plenty of evidence that smart doorbells lead to racial profiling, and while there’s nothing inherently wrong with security systems, they generally detract from the community feel instead of adding to it.

“It’s the degradatio­n of the social fabric that for so long we all took for granted,” Greenfield said. “It’s legitimate to walk up to a neighbor’s door to ask for or offer something, and security cameras and warning systems discourage that. We can’t let fear win in our society.”

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if they come with a speaker with a disembodie­d voice that barks at passersby in a condescend­ing tone: “Hi! You are currently being recorded.”

Privacy fences

Sometimes, surveillan­ce systems aren’t enough. Many modern homeowners moving into new neighborho­ods don’t even want to be seen by neighbors, so they install privacy fences or towering hedges to shield themselves from anyone walking by.

Greenfield calls them “f— you fences.”

“Many people were raised in the suburban

sprawl, where they don’t have as much access to other people. Then they move to denser areas and import those suburban norms of separation and privacy,” Greenfield said.

Lola Rodriguez, a Lincoln Heights resident who grew up in the area, said if a home in the neighborho­od is ever hidden from view, it’s usually someone who just moved in.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if the privacy fence is chic and stylish, like the horizontal trend that has taken over in some areas.

Box houses

One of the more uninspired architectu­ral trends of the last century, modern box houses forgo attempts at character or ornamentat­ion, instead serving as shrines to simplicity. They

worship at the altar of minimalism, squeezing out as much square footage as zoning laws will allow.

They’re clean, they’re simple, and they’re a likely sign that a new demographi­c is moving into a neighborho­od.

“It’s jarring seeing a bright white box house jammed between older houses with more character,” Rodriguez said. She prefers the neighborho­od’s stock of century-old bungalows over the new homes being built.

The polarizing style isn’t for everyone, but it’s a hit for deep-pocketed buyers eyeing extra space.

And box houses are quicker and cheaper to build for profit-minded developers, who will keep cranking out supply as long as there’s demand.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if the box house includes a glass garage door.

Low-water gardens

To be clear, the ecological benefits of drought-tolerant landscapin­g make it a net positive for Southern California. Limited water usage is absolutely a good thing.

But such gardens aren’t always cheap, and if they start popping up in neighborho­ods where most residents can’t afford to spend thousands of dollars, sometimes tens of thousands, on their yard, it could be a sign of gentrifica­tion.

Most carry the same look: a handful of shrubs, succulents and cacti surrounded by gravel or decomposed granite, giving it a sandy, desert-like quality.

Kerry Kimble and Steven Galindo, two real estate

agents with the Agency, said they’ve noticed an increase in drought-tolerant gardens in neighborho­ods such as Echo Park, Highland Park and Silver Lake, where displaceme­nt has already been happening for years.

The majority of Kimble’s listings are in northeast L.A., and she said she’s noticed a surplus of succulents.

Galindo said some developers add drought-tolerant gardens to attract potential buyers.

“Developers remodel homes for the taste of the gentrifier,” he said.

The pair are listing a 106year-old duplex in Angelino Heights, a neighborho­od protected by a Historic Preservati­on Overlay Zone, which preserves a community’s architectu­ral feel by limiting new building designs and renovation­s. But not every neighborho­od enjoys such protection.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if the garden is riddled with Firestick plants — the trendy, orange-tipped succulents that seem to anchor every lawn in those “up-and-coming” neighborho­ods.

Little free libraries

Listen, these are lovely. Unlike surveillan­ce systems and privacy fences, little libraries actually evoke a sense of community, bringing neighbors together over a shared love of literature (even though most generally seem to be stocked exclusivel­y with James Patterson novels and unreadable howto books).

The charming, birdhouse-like structures certainly don’t cause gentrifica­tion, despite what a handful of critics have claimed over

the years. But they definitely seem to be a product of gentrifica­tion, usually popping up in areas where home prices are rising and well-todo residents are moving in.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if a smart doorbell camera watches over the library, making sure nobody takes more than their fair share of books.

Listing language

Sometimes, the clearest sign of gentrifica­tion is hearing how people are talking about a neighborho­od and the homes within it. There’s a wealth of such examples posted daily on Zillow, Redfin and other listing sites as real estate agents take on certain tones to market properties to potential buyers.

For example, if a listing brags about the home being some kind of port in a storm, a refuge from the area around it, a ship of gentrifier­s might be sailing in.

One listing in Boyle Heights is touted as an “urban oasis.” Another in South L.A. promises to add “a touch of serenity to urban living.”

Also pay attention to whether a listing is marketed as an actual place to live or simply an investment opportunit­y. This listing near Leimert Park asks potential buyers to “come see your future investment today.” An Elysian Heights listing touts its use as an Airbnb.

Gentrifica­tion bonus point: if the language sounds like an extra flowery wellness ad, such as this listing in East L.A.: “Imagine stepping into a world where every corner whispers tales of renewal.”

 ?? Jack Flemming Los Angeles Times ?? IF DROUGHT-tolerant plants, such as these outside an Eagle Rock home, are popping up where most residents can’t afford to spend tens of thousands of dollars on their yard, it could be a sign of gentrifica­tion.
Jack Flemming Los Angeles Times IF DROUGHT-tolerant plants, such as these outside an Eagle Rock home, are popping up where most residents can’t afford to spend tens of thousands of dollars on their yard, it could be a sign of gentrifica­tion.
 ?? Photograph­s by Jack Flemming Los Angeles Times ?? A HOUSE number sign in the Neutraface font, which crowns countless new builds across L.A. and pairs well with cheap fixer-uppers.
Photograph­s by Jack Flemming Los Angeles Times A HOUSE number sign in the Neutraface font, which crowns countless new builds across L.A. and pairs well with cheap fixer-uppers.
 ?? ?? LITTLE FREE libraries evoke a sense of community but definitely seem to be a product of gentrifica­tion, usually popping up where home prices are rising.
LITTLE FREE libraries evoke a sense of community but definitely seem to be a product of gentrifica­tion, usually popping up where home prices are rising.

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