Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Jon Santiago's avatar

It would be great to read a deep dive into the history of housing in Roma and Condesa. From what I’ve gathered (very sparingly, so please correct me if I’m wrong), these two neighborhoods were originally built for the wealthy. They then became more working class when the well-to-do people moved to other neighborhoods like Polanco after the earthquake in the 80s.

The reason I bring this up is not to dismiss the plight of affordable housing for middle and lower class Mexicans. It’s to raise the question of whether these neighborhoods are just in the part of a long-term housing cycle where the shift is back to the affluent.

Expand full comment
Sarah DeVries's avatar

This was excellent. I just wrote a piece on the protests that came out this morning on the same subject: https://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexico-living/the-awkward-truth-behind-mexico-city-protests-anti-gentrification/

Honestly, yours is better and I really appreciated the organization of it.

Gentrification of this type hasn't really happened where I live in Xalapa, Ver. -- most foreigners kind of keep to themselves, there's no "enclave"...but everything can change!

As you say, this is an issue in big, popular cities all over the world, but the idea that it HAS to be is just so unimaginative. Like, there is no way that it's impossible for everyone to get to live in nice, safe, functional communities, right?

Anyway, thanks for sharing this...I'm planning to link it in the comments under my article; it's such a good deep-er dive.

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts