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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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2010/6/17 17:22 Last Login : 2014/11/19 0:07 From Pizza City
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Really good point.
Posted on: 2013/1/7 1:28
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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No idea, we're not neighbors anymore.
Posted on: 2013/1/7 1:24
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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DT JC and lower Manhattan are at or slightly above sea level if these areas are in danger of being flooded permanently this will have a negative impact on JC Heights. Flooding would cause the loss of important infrastructure such as the PATH system and the Holland tunnel and probably the Lincoln tunnel. This would also destroy much of the subway system and buildings in lower Manhattan. All the jobs that the local economy depends on would probably move far away.
Posted on: 2013/1/5 16:43
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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My neighbor couldn't get anyone to pay $25K for a Brownstone down there in the eighties. My ex wouldn't move there in the 90's because he thought it was a dump. So what does 'inner-city' really mean? Is it related to an 'outer-city'?
Posted on: 2013/1/5 14:34
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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C-Town in Bergen Square is excellent. They have a massive amount of food choices packed into a small store. They'll also carry your packages hoem with you, no charge. The manager is friendly, says hello all the time, and is really on top of what goes on. It's like a big Mom and Pop store. I love it!
Posted on: 2013/1/5 14:07
Edited by JCCheerleader on 2013/1/5 14:31:46
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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White flight out of downtown in the late 80's? News to me. By then "rich people" were busy buying row houses as soon as they came on the market, usually owner-occupied row houses, in my experience. Not sure of the dates, but it was about that time that the nabes were put on the National Register. At worst, dtjc was a commercially under-serviced inner city neighborhood with excellent transportation to high-paying jobs and with a very desirable housing stock.
Posted on: 2013/1/5 13:24
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Oh great thats just what we need another truck motor constantly reving it's engine early in the morning.
Posted on: 2013/1/5 3:19
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Get on your bikes and ride !
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Good point vindication15. Why are the artists called pioneers when it's really the rich who have driven up the prices downtown because they will pay higher and higher prices. And what about the poor people who stayed Downtown after the white flight of the late 80's and the place was like a slum. Are they pioneers?
Posted on: 2013/1/5 2:17
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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And now Fresh Direct delivers to the Heights. A GREAT option.
Posted on: 2013/1/3 22:59
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Downtown we have a Keyfood that has really become terrific, in my opinion. It's not worth driving to, but it and soap.com (or similar website) for cleaning supplies, etc. have really eased shopping without compromising. Also, WF Tribeca is less than 15 minutes away. Shoprite - which truly sucks a## is no longer relevent, I think.
Posted on: 2013/1/3 22:53
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Don't knock it till you try it !
Posted on: 2013/1/3 22:42
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Get on your bikes and ride !
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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2012/1/11 18:21 Last Login : 2019/12/26 15:30 From GV Bayside Park
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Welcome to the light.. As far as supermarkets Willie all of JC supermarkets suck a##!
Posted on: 2013/1/3 20:40
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Willie- Let's keep this to ourselves and let the naysayers say what they will. Actually, I used to be a Heights-basher but I've seen the light, especially after Sandy and I was forced to take the jitneys to Manhattan via Union City.
I friend had to take the NJ transit bus from Port Authority and it took a shocking 15 minutes around 6pm
Posted on: 2013/1/3 20:37
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Newbie
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2011/10/6 15:27 Last Login : 2013/2/21 19:34 From Jersey City
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Once the PATH is fully back in action it wont be that bad. As others have mentioned the Hoboken PATH station is a solid option late night, so is Journal Square. The cost of a cabs is still far cheaper than your rent would be anywhere in Manhattan and most parts of inner Brooklyn or Queens.
If you hate the Heights so much go back to New York. We have delicious inexpensive restaurants and some of the best pizzerias, chinese restaurants and delis in the the city. Sure, we could use a better grocery store (especially since the Hoboken Shoprite got destroyed by Sandy), but that will come with time. Our neighborhood is no more a slum than lots of places in NYC proper. The only difference is transit and its not as bad as you all seem to think it is. In Chicago it took more than two hours to go halfway across the city. From the Heights I can be in Fort Greene, Long Island City, The Upper West Side or Alphabet City in less than that and I don't have to pay Manhattan rents. Seems like a pretty good deal to me.
Posted on: 2013/1/3 20:19
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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The problem with heights, JSQ and most areas of JC is the density. Density is only good if you have good mass transit options, otherwise it creates a mess because of all the cars on the road. I wish there was a way to reverse the reckless overdevelopment done in this entire state during the past century.
Posted on: 2013/1/3 14:11
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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wow. You made me speechless lol
Posted on: 2012/12/10 2:57
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Just can't stay away
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That someone would have slapped me upside the head 4 years ago when I stated I was moving to Jersey City Heights? LOL, wistful thinking. But to your point, Kitten, about this being "post Sandy" - this thread started with someone wondering if property values in the Heights would increase once everyone saw the "advantages" of living here, as opposed to downtown JC or Hoboken. I stand by my comments - Sandy has revealed the depth of the incompetency, lack of planning, lack of forward thinking, etc., of so many levels of the government and within the infrastructure management that connects the Heights to the regional economic/cultural engine. The Heights is just to feebly connected to NYC to ever benefit from people's thinking about the impact of this storm.
Posted on: 2012/12/10 1:59
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Hold up. This is absolutely a post-Sandy issue. Before the storm, late night, you could have taken PATH to Hoboken and then an 8 dollar cab ride home NO PROBLEM. I took the PATH last night to Grove at 10pm and then a it was a $7 cab ride home. Took 5 minutes for me to get a cab. If you are commuting to and from work there are jitneys and buses during rush hours. YES, late night it's harder to get home but when I lived in Queens I had the same problem. As far as shopping goes, that's what NYC and the internet is for. What do you want to buy? We have places on Central Avenue for good bread, cheese, and wine... what else could you want?
Posted on: 2012/12/8 12:33
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Just can't stay away
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Not if you live in the Heights!!! It's either the PATH, of NJ Transit to/from the Port Authority. Tonight, I went to take the 12:15 #123 bus to Christ Hospital, which filled up by the time 1/2 the people lined up could get on. The driver, "Carlos", helpfully told us to wait for the next (1:45am) bus... God bless you if you live in other neighborhoods. I am SO DAM@ED SORRY I moved to the Heights. It is a slum, will remain a slum, with substandard transportation to the bigger world, nothing to do, nowhere to shop except for 99 cent stores, filthy streets, a Neanderthal of a Ward Councilperson (Goughan). If Sandy has shown us anything it is that you should SPEND THE MONEY TO LIVE SOMEPLACE CIVILIZED, and not move someplace hoping for better...
Posted on: 2012/12/8 6:31
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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I would be fascinated to see a poll on how Manhattan bound Heights residents get there (pre-Sandy): by PATH or via a Lincoln tunnel bus. It sure sounds like large numbers take the tunnel route. If you live in a downtown bubble, you have no idea how to get out of JC besides the Path. Those of us who live outside the Path system have many, many, options of getting into NYC. There are 3 buses they go into NYC from here, or I can take the light rail and connect to the Path, or take the light rail to connect to NJ transit trains to NYC. or take a jitney, or take the ferry. Since I left downtown, I don't miss the cramped crowded Path. I ride it only when I have to.
Posted on: 2012/12/7 16:11
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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I think those jitney vans would explode to fill the gap if late nite service halt by PATH was permanent.
I can support giving special groups, like teachers or firepeople or police, special incentives to live in troubled areas. Everyone is obviously have their own opninion - no right or wrong answer
Posted on: 2012/12/7 0:55
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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I would be fascinated to see a poll on how Manhattan bound Heights residents get there (pre-Sandy): by PATH or via a Lincoln tunnel bus. It sure sounds like large numbers take the tunnel route.
Posted on: 2012/12/6 22:53
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Just can't stay away
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The chatter on the PATH from JSQ to WTC this morning was along the lines of "if I'm stuck with an hour commute I would rather live (fill in the blank, someplace nice...)" OK, IF you go ONLY into midtown va bus or van, you are probably OK staying in the Heights. But the reason the"ass end" of Brooklyn prospers over other places is that alternative neighborhoods rise or fall based on the availibility of multi-modal transporation in and out of Manhattan. JC, like Hoboken, is never going to be a stand-alone city in the same way as other smaller cities, owing to NYC being th ecenter of gravity. PATH is in full meltdown mode, with no end in sight, and getting in and out of Manhattan is going to be torture for the forseeable future. If this is the result of Sandy, I see NO future for the Heights other than to remain where it is, until mass transit in and out of NYC is improved drastically.
Posted on: 2012/12/6 18:36
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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I think they ask if artists and gays live in the area because it is an excellent social indicator of an area's potential for increasing in value. I think it was in the Antonionni movie Blowup (1966) where there is a scene of David Hemmings (?) driving around London looking for areas to invest in based on the presence of homosexuals.
Posted on: 2012/12/4 15:07
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Residents should seek an abatement from cityhall - Doesn't hurt to ask if you have a realtor's report suggesting the property / neighborhood has a decreased value post Sandy.
Posted on: 2012/12/4 11:52
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My humor is for the silent blue collar majority - If my posts offend, slander or you deem inappropriate and seek deletion, contact the webmaster for jurisdiction.
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Home away from home
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Explain "....artists made the areas nice" Did they forcefully kick the homeless out of blighted areas? Did they all partake in a community program which picked up trash every weekend? Did they pay more in taxes? Did they do government jobs while also being artists? Did they patrol the streets when they were not artists? You ask me what would have happened in SOHO, Lower east, etc if artists hadn't moved there. I have no clue. Would you have gotten the same result if lawyers moved there first? I don't know. I am not for giving any group, whether it be artists, monks, police officers, etc any incentives for moving into a neighborhood. It's unfair, period. You know of the glamorous stories of artists supposedly "revitalizing" a neighborhood. I know of the powerhouse "arts district" where artists lived for FREE in those buildings occupying them until they were kicked the hell out of there and now there are proposals saying there should be "affordable" (ie below market value) units given to those artists. It would be insane if not so comical. My govt thinks I will be more accepting of those who make less money than me if they got what I paid for at half off...it's quite hilarious. I know that mural on Columbus Street does NOTHING to improve downtown jc. Did grove plaza develop because developers saw that mural and suddenly became interested in JC? Laughable. Did those luxury brands in soho come to that area because artists lived there? Stretch of the imagination. Yes, rich people don't just move to certain areas. But even rich people get priced out of certain areas and move out to the next neighborhood. They certainly don't ask their realtor, "hey, do artists live here?" Comical. Look, there's no point in convincing you. It's just like brewster. Whatever data I pull off of zillow, he will keep thinking there's more value in the heights than downtown jc - even redefining the word value for people. You think artists revitalize an area and we should attract artists to all these blighted areas. Good for you.
Posted on: 2012/12/4 6:48
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Rich people don't want to live in depressed areas because they have options - due to intelligence, common sense, family history, smart decisions, etc however they got there.
Many artists don't have these same options so they are limited in their living choices. Maybe it's not strictly a cause and effect relationship, but do you think SOHO / Lower East / Village would have ended up the same way if the city had just offered doctors / lawyers / business people incentives to move there ? No chance. They waited until the artists made the areas nice and then moved there.
Posted on: 2012/12/4 1:27
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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If I was injured by an IED, that would be a pretty insensitive remark. Yes, rich people, when given ECONOMIC INCENTIVES like the ones many have proposed be given to artists, will not take advantage of them. It's the reason why there are no primary care physicians in the NHSC and the reason why we have no public interest lawyers enrolled in special programs that pay their law school debt. I understand your hatred of rich people (jealousy) but do you think they got rich because they made bad financial decisions? If you set aside 20 "affordable housing" units to physicians, do you think no physicians would buy them? Are you kidding me?
Posted on: 2012/12/3 21:49
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Re: Property values in the Heights (post Sandy)
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Have you played a lot of football or been blown up by an IED? There must be some explanation as to why your brain seems unable to function, and comprehend why rich people don't need to seek out cheap workspace in blighted areas.
Posted on: 2012/12/3 21:28
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