Quote:
Originally Posted by Steely Dan
…
as for the crime issue, you're WAY overthinking that. are you a young black male engaged in the gang/drug underworld? do you sell or purchase illegal narcotics? do you associate with gang-members in any fashion? do you frequently visit and hangout in known gang activity hot-spots?
if you answered "no" to all of those questions, the chances of chicago's atrocious levels of street gang violence directly affecting you are actually pretty damn low in the grand scheme of things. i'm not saying it can't ever happen, but it's definitely not something that keeps me up at night, and i've actively chosen to raise my family in the city.
|
This
I don't get the OP's issue with gang stuff that would never effect him where he choses to live.
Its not its just in the hoods he would live nor venter to go to anyway. Like a half of an hour away in some times.
He thinks that the city has no hard boundaries and its like murder everywhere. That's a disconnect I don't think he truly understands. Glowrock moved back and forth here though the years. Ask him if he is scared for his life everyday. I would suspect not but I won't speak for him. He as a newbie might give you some advice where to start.
It sounds like it took him some time to feel the lay of the land so to speak. Feel free to travel to the Chicago meet up forum that is happing soon if you have time.
https://forum.skyscraperpage.com/sho...d.php?t=239821
You would get tons of real details quickly I would suspect if you asked.
Back to the shootings issue...
Its not across the board it is in the no go zones. That pretty much it.
Its all gang on gang.
I don't understand why he does not comprehend this.
He also overrates taxes and impending Doom.
Chicago will never implode like the majority black major cities that happened to quite a few from the 70's-2000's
Due to the central nature of the Chicagoland area and great Metra access to DownTown, tons of wealthy family's continued to work downtown and live in a nice Burb with a great school district. And a very many still do, esp older more establish families.
If you have kids or plan to the School district will be your most important decision where to grow strong roots. If you are free of than your options are endless and at 1/4 the cost of housing than what you would get on the coasts.
If anything if you have been following the city is getting higher income peoples as some of the poorest are moving away.
That's in the data.
A drop in population matters real little in the grand scheme of things.
If anything it is more congested now than it ever was.
Rent first...
Find your bearings and in a year or two find you place.
Its hard to not know the region and plopping down on an area you know nothing about, esp in a region of 10 million people.
I would not purchase anything in any major city in the USA without feeling the lay of the land and the commute times to work. BTW what line of work are you in. Its not like Chicago would pay half of the coasts, more like 75-85% from what I have been gathering through the years in multiple industries and workplaces. A good purchase price and a high pay with all of the amenities of Chicago has to offer your savings alone will let you retire years earlier than higher home priced cities.
What's your rush?
BTW Chicago for the average person or traveler is extremely safe.
If you are smart enough to stay away with shady hoods its as safe as Des Moines Iowa that has its own hoods too.
If you are not a gang member I think you will live to see another day here.
BTW ardecila IMO west of the united center is to far to the far west for this OP, that's right on the doorstep of the far West side....
Quote:
Originally Posted by ardecila
There isn't a whole ton of condo inventory in "not entirely gentrified" neighborhoods. The bulk of the city's condos are concentrated in fully-gentrified neighborhoods on the North Side where property taxes and COL will be high. The last 10 years of booming growth have brought very few new condos on the market and actually removed quite a bit of condos through deconversions (see River City). Developers who sat on a bunch of inventory through the rough years either started renting out the units and making a killing, or sold to investors who are doing the same.
That being said, you should look at the area just west of United Center... new Green Line station at Damen will be opening around 2 years from now, and it still has a lot of small pre-recession condo buildings with good deals.
|
No for this OP because he is not a pioneer and would like a large buffer safe zone around him.
He has so many other options than this.
Last time TUP posted it sounded like he was going to PM him and put him in one of his Pilsen buildings.
Again.
Where you live and how close to transportation, affordability and comfort levels seems to be his highest priority. Sound like he already wants a gentrified or already strong white area that never went to crap. Again lots of choices there too.