tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8077884952860701432.post4040665453434146916..comments2023-11-03T06:00:05.767-07:00Comments on Toms Blog: San Francisco keeping quietTom Kniesmeijerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15289866485771818073noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8077884952860701432.post-45619582832821798012008-05-12T08:33:00.000-07:002008-05-12T08:33:00.000-07:00I think you're right about some element of that en...I think you're right about some element of that energy being gone with youth. Having lived there these last 17 years, since I was a lad of 22, I know exactly what you're talking about.<BR/><BR/>There is another aspect to it, however. Mostly the economy. The cycle we often see in the US is:<BR/><BR/>- artists are broke<BR/>- artists colonize cheap living spaces - warehouse lofts, run-down neighborhoods. these become havens for a while.<BR/>- artists show their work in open studios. a gallery or three pop up. a few cafés pop up to support that.<BR/>- some professionals, much more well-to-do than a working artist, who admire the artist lifestyle and surroundings, move into these areas.<BR/>- with the influx of these folks, the areas gentrify and get expensive.<BR/>- artists can't afford to live there anymore.<BR/><BR/>It's all kind of the same for musicians, writers, full-time activists, etc. Then you put that into a place like San Francisco, a mere 7 miles square. Add to it the huge number of people who want to live there, and the massive (and probably collapsing) real estate boom, and what has happened is that the havens have all but evaporated.<BR/><BR/>I say "all but" because they've moved. Oakland, Berkeley, Emeryville. Zoning laws created 30 years ago to allow for artists to live in industrial space (live-work) have been used to build thousands of "lofts" that cost $600,000 or more.<BR/><BR/>I'll add in passing that seven years of struggle under the yoke of the Bush Crime Family has been really difficult for that energy you describe. People have been on edge. The term "San Francisco Values" has been used in elections as some kind of negative attractor, a reason to vote more right-wing. <BR/><BR/>I think (as much as I hope) that things will get a little more vibrant soon. A good real estate, if not economic, collapse should be invigorating!<BR/><BR/>- the guy in your house :)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com