Can Ditmas Park Save The Middle Class?
Despite tremendous quality-of-life gains, more residents left New York City in 2006 than in 1993. (Brooklyn was the one borough that bucked that trend.) The main reason, says an article from the American Enterprise Institute, is the the rising cost of living for middle-class families. In fact, New York now has the lowest rate of…

Despite tremendous quality-of-life gains, more residents left New York City in 2006 than in 1993. (Brooklyn was the one borough that bucked that trend.) The main reason, says an article from the American Enterprise Institute, is the the rising cost of living for middle-class families. In fact, New York now has the lowest rate of middle-income families of any city; and, except for Los Angeles, it also has the smallest percentage of middle-income neighborhoods. One exception—and a model for the future—is Ditmas Park:
The ‘place’ Ellen and Joe looked for was not just a physical location but something less tangible: a sense of community and a neighborhood to raise their hoped-for children. Although they considered suburban locations, as most families do, ultimately they chose the Ditmas Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, where Joe had grown up. At first, this seemed a risky choice. While Joe was growing up in the 1980s, the neighborhood—a mixture of Victorian homes and modest apartments—had become crime-infested. The old families were moving out, and newer ones were not replacing them. Yet Joe’s Mom still lived there, and they liked the idea of having grandma around for their planned-for family.
Politicians genuflect to the idea of maintaining a middle class, yet their actions suggest otherwise. In a city that has been losing middle-class families for generations, the resurgence of places like Ditmas Park represents a welcome change. In recent years, child-friendly restaurants and shops have started up along once-decayed Cortelyou Road. More important, some local elementary schools have shown marked improvement, with an increase in parental involvement and new facilities. Even in hard economic times, the area has become a beacon to New York families, as well as singles seeking a community where they will put down long-term roots. There’s an attempt in this neighborhood to break down the city feel and to see this more as a kind of a small town, notes Ellen. It may be in the city, but it’s a community unto itself, a place where you can stay and raise your children.
If cities like New York want to nurture their middle-class populations, the article suggests, they will need to shift their priorities away from “subsidizing developers for luxury mega-developments, new museums, or performing arts centers” and instead focus on “those things critical to the middle class such as maintaining relatively low density work areas and shopping streets, new schools, and parks.” In our opinion, at the end of the day, it’s all about the schools.
The Luxury City vs. the Middle Class [The American]
I think middle class status greatly varies based on one’s family size – a single person with no dependents middle class can be much lower than that of a family. Didnt’ we have this discussion not too long ago? Maybe about a NYT article?
plus i make about the literal MEDIAN in this city. there are not that many people making more than 200K a year here despite what you think and there are hundreds of thousands and almost millions of people making making under 20K and im not talking about students with supplemental income from parents from other states. sometimes i agree with the what, people in nyc seriously are living in lala land with their perspectives of economic reality. most likely the housing market is what warped all your brains to begin with.
*rob*
“Ditmas park is as suburban as it gets….yeah maybe it’s nyc by name and legalese, but um, sorry brooklyn and queens were always a suburb of manhattan.”
This reaction surprises me. When I think of the suburbs, I think of repetitious, cookie cutter housing, strip malls, a general lack of cultural diversity, lack of good public transportation, etc. Yet Ditmas Park has beautiful, interesting houses, no strip malls, is arguably the most culturally diverse neighborhood in Brooklyn, and the B and Q lines run straight through it. If that’s “as suburban as it gets”, sign me up!
okay so then technically i should consider myself upper lower class? um no. i make under 50K and i consider myself middle class, even in this city. you people are on crack.
*rob*
A $250k income for a family of four won’t buy you a million dollar house unless you’ve saved a quarter of a million or made the equity somewhere.
wasder, you’ve hit the nail on the head.
$200k makes the cut for middle class in NYC ($150k at a push) but I’d consider that the lower cut-off point.
bad typing morning—businesses have to figure living expenses into salaries…
Live alot larger is what I was trying to say…
“it’s not middle class for the entire earth, for this country, and let’s face it, not even nyc.”
I know people who a lot “larger” in most traditional senses on much less money in other metropolitan areas. Its all relative Rob. The reason salaries are so high here is that businesses know they have to living expenses into salaries. Again, I don’t pretend to know what the numerical expression of “middle class” should be in NYC but it has to be higher than most other places.