Title: GENTRIFICATION AND GROWTH MANAGEMENT IN SEATTLE, 19902000
1GENTRIFICATION AND GROWTH MANAGEMENT IN SEATTLE,
1990-2000
Richard Morrill Geography University of
Washington January, 2003
2 GENTRIFICATION AND GROWTH MANAGEMENT IN
SEATTLE, 1990-2000
- Richard Morrill
- Geography, University of Washington
- Introduction
- My purpose is to use a set of maps of
demographic change to depict gentrification and
displacement within the city of Seattle, 1990-2000
- Background
- The city experienced moderate population and job
growth. Expansion of the information and
technology sectors fueled city growth. - Seattle changed from a relatively egalitarian
city in 1970 to one of startling income
inequality.
3- Higher returns to education were critical in
encouraging gentrification that is, rising
income, reinvestment in better housing, and
displacement. - Growth Management constrained growth on the
fringe, enabling the city of Seattle to intensify
and densify both jobs and housing. -
- Scope
- Even though much of the displacement of the
poor was to southern suburbs in King county, only
the city of Seattle will be studied. - Seattle is one jurisdiction and fully built,
so the effect of redevelopment can be easily seen.
4- Data include both 100 population data and sample
data, including occupation, income and poverty.
Most maps will be of 1990-2000 change. - Seattle versus the suburbs
- For perspective here is a little information
on how gentrification in Seattle has displaced
the less successful to the suburbs.
- Change in minority share
- Seattle Suburban King 5.3 12.1
- Change in share 25-64
- 5.8 -.1
- Change in med house value
- 88 66
- Change in husb-wife families
- -1.9 -5.7
- Change in college grad share
- 9.3 5.0
- Change in prof. occup share
- 11.6 7.7
- Change in share of poor
- -.6 1.2
5- What these differences tell us about
gentrification and displacement. - Greater increase in share of minorities in the
suburbs - Greater increase in share of workers 25-64 in the
city - Greater decline of husband-wife families in the
suburbs
- Greater increase of median house value and rents
in the city - Astoundingly high shares of college educated
(47) and of professional occupations (48) in
the city. - Reduced share of the poor in the city, increased
in the suburbs.
6- Population Change
- Almost all the growth in the city occurred in
high density apartments and condominiums, mostly
in and around downtown, where the population more
than doubled.
7Race and ethnicity Race is part of the
gentrification story. In the far north and far
south of the city, the share of whites fell
moderately, and were replaced by Asians, but in
the area of displacement east of downtown, white
numbers grew dramatically.
8- The map of minority change is the obverse, and
nicely depicts decline east of downtown and
growth in the far north and south of the city. -
9Change in the Black population is a major
component of gentrification. The large area of
decline east and southeast of downtown is the
core of the historic Black community. Aggressive
white reentry and reinvestment displaced several
thousand Black persons. Even public housing
projects are affected, as they are rebuilt with a
share of market homes.
10- AGE
- Seattle is unusually attractive to young adults
and fairly unattractive to families with
children. - Numbers of children under 10 are declining over
most of the city, from already extremely low
levels and even affects minority areas, where
many families have been displaced to the south.
11Change in young adults, 25-34, is totally
different, and very high, despite already high
numbers. They are the main constituent of growth
downtown, on Capitol Hill, on Queen Anne and in
areas west of the University of Washington. Many
work in the engineering, information and
technology firms expanding in the area.
12- Persons 45-64, the aging babyboomers, increased
in numbers in downtowns condominiums, but more in
the ring of family housing surrounding the core,
and contributing to gentrification in the Ballard
and Greenlake areas west of the university, and
in the southeastern Seattle minority area.
13The older population, over 65, declined in much
of the city, often displaced by the more
aggressive gentrifying 25-34 year old group
14- Types of Households
- Seattle is not a family city, and shares and
numbers fell in much of the city. Small gains did
occur in areas of Asian immigration in the far
south, and in the downtown core, over 90 in the
form of husband-wife couples without children,
both young and empty-nesters.
15- Seattle has a very high share of singles over
40 percent of all households. But many singles
seem to have been outbid for housing downtown by
double-income households, but they did contribute
to gentrification and displacement east of
downtown and west of the university.
16Non-family households with 2 or more persons,
which in Seattle are about 2/3 opposite sex and
1/3 same sex grew very rapidly over most of the
city, but especially in and around downtown, in
the Fremont, Ballard and Greenlake areas, where
they often displaced aging families. These are
the dominant agents of gentrification.
17- Housing
- Although most housing expansion in Seattle has
been in the form of apartments, ownership shares
increased slightly because of condominium
construction and conversion. The map of ownership
change highlights its role in the reinvestment
and gentrification of the core.
18- High proportions of single family housing
dominate the periphery of the historic city of
Seattle, before 1955. Large scale replacement by
apartments has reduced their numbers and led to
price inflation, as they are attractive to both
family and non-family professionals.
19The areas dominated by small apartment structures
(under 10 units) very much corresponds with the
areas of gentrification. However, in downtown
Seattle, new housing was mainly in the form of
large, high-rise apartment structures.
20Change in housing values may be the single best
indicator of gentrification, especially areas
with over a 100 appreciation. This map is quite
different from one of the current values, as
change in most affluent areas was modest. Four
areas of gentrification include Capitol Hill
(east of downtown), Beacon Hill-Rainier Valley to
the SE
21- The northern part of West Seattle (closest to
downtown) and the Fremont-Greenlake area west of
the university, areas with many high-tech jobs - Change in median rents show a more concentrated
downtown pattern of highest rent change, often
from new construction of much higher quality.
22Education Change in shares with college degrees
is another good indicator of gentrification.
Higher shares prevail in most areas of
gentrification, far to the west of the UW, and in
West Seattle and the southeast from low to
moderate levels, and in Greenlake and Queen Anne
from already high levels.
23Occupation Areas with the greatest increase in
shares of professional occupations almost
perfectly correspond with areas of
gentrification downtown, on Capitol Hill,
southeast along Lake Washington, in West Seattle,
and in Fremont and Greenlake.
24- Income, poverty and inequality.
- Change in Median household Income
- No surprise here! Areas of greater gain in income
are the gentrifying areas in and around downtown,
west of the UW and southeast along Lake
Washington, while already affluent, less
professional parts of the city had little change.
25Change in the percent poor is a good indicator of
the displacement effect of gentrification,
evident mainly downtown and in areas of minority
displacement to the east and southeast. Poverty
rates increased in areas of recent Asian
immigration in the far north and far south of the
city.
26- Income inequality, a measure of the gap between
mean and median household incomes, increased
markedly in Seattle from 1980 to 2000. It is not
surprisingly high in areas with a high share of
professionals, in and around downtown and the
university, and far lower in both less and more
affluent mainly residential parts of the city. It
is high is in areas of partial displacement of
Blacks southeast of downtown.
27Migration The geographic pattern of
migrants, those from beyond King county is highly
concentrated, and a telling indicator of WHO is
doing the gentrifying not locals, but young
people from other counties, states and countries,
attending the university and filling hi-tech and
professional jobs in the gentrifying areas.
28- Change in the percent foreign born has a very
different geography. There is a downtown-Capitol
Hill and Queen Anne cluster, more professional,
but more dominant are areas of recent immigration
of Asian (and Hispanic) families to the far north
and especially the far south of the city.
29Place of work The maps of change in Seattle
persons working in the city or in the suburbs
reveals an intriguing division higher shares
staying in the city occur in gentrifying areas
west of the university, as the workforce shifts
toward the professions.
30But on prestigious Capitol Hill and high tech
areas around Lake Union, higher numbers like to
live in the urbane core, while working in the
suburbs (Microsoft, et al), leading to a broad
equivalence in the rush hour east and westbound
commutes.
31- The final map shows persons using public transit
yes the highest shares are indeed in the core
gentrifying areas, as well as in less affluent
minority areas (often core service workers who
cant afford to live there).
32- Summary and conclusion
- Gentrification is real
- Population, income, housing, jobs, education
and race - Agents of gentrification
- Geography of gentrification
- Reinvestment and displacement
- Why did this occur?
- High tech information economy
- Natural environment and recreation
- Social environment and tolerance
- Revitalization of downtown
- The Planning context
- Growth Management
- The New urbanist ideal
- Market and planning in sync
33References
- Bourne, L (1993) The demise of gentrification.
Urban Geography, 14, 95-107 - Hodge, D (1979) The Seattle Displacement Study.
Seattle. Office of Planning - Hodge, D (1981) Residential revitalization in a
growth region, Geographical Review, 71, 188-200 - Hodge, D and Lee, B (1981) Spatial differences in
displacement rates in US cities, Urban Studies,
21, 219-231 - Ley, D (1996) The new middle class and the
remaking of the central city. Oxford University
Press. - Smith, N (1992) Gentrification and uneven
development. Economic Geography, 58, 139-155 - Smith, N (1996) The new urban frontier
gentrification and the revanchist city. New
York Routledge