Quote:
Originally Posted by Crawford
That sounds highly implausible. DC is one of the most hyper-gentrified geographies on earth. Baltimore has no such pressures.
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I live between both. DC is absolutely not one of "the most hyper-gentrified geographies on earth". Don't let social media/forum echo chambers paint a false narrative of the city. DC absolutely has problems considering it has more homicides than Baltimore right now and was a couple of pen strokes away from losing its NHL & NBA team.
Baltimore has
always had the underlying economic pressure for growth. It just lacked proper management and leadership for decades up until literally the last ~5 years, and because of that, the some of its parts are finally starting to work in harmony.
It's slashed its homicide rate in
half in two years, has billions being invested in god knows how many major infrastructure/developement projects, is at an all time in housing production with no construction let up in sight (it's at positive net occupied housing). The city is going to vote to lower property taxes over the next 7 years to make it more competitive and the final cherry on top which will pay dividends when MD has a 100k housing unit shortage and the city finally has state level backing/support with Governor Moore.
Everyone in the greater DC-Baltimore region can and is feeling the cities shift, and it's happening
extremely quick considering how large it's "needle" has to move to be noticed.