Neighborhood Rebranding In New York City
Neighborhood rebranding in New York City has been a constant phenomenon for decades as real estate promoters, community groups and residents all sometimes rename communities to increase prestige and distance themselves from an older negative reputation. Five Points, Manhattan lost its identity for this reason.
Several neighborhood were rebranded after the Civil War when slightly tawdry neighborhoods like Harsonville, centered on what is now Broadway about 68th Street, were reclassified as part of suburban Bloomingdale farther up Bloomingdale Road, which itself was rebranded as "The Boulevard". What is now the Upper West Side was meant to be named the "West End" to lure an Anglophile upper class—that was not so easily taken in, however, and remained on the East Side.
After World War II, the name of the small and fashionable hill that had been known as Murray Hill was applied to the perfectly featureless area to its east.
Probably the most successful and influential neighborhood rebranding was of SoHo, which stands for South of Houston Street, and is deliberately imitative of Soho in London. TriBeCa, another rebranding success, applied to the more southerly part of the former Lower West Side, stands for Triangle Below Canal Street.
The use of acronym and medial capitals has been influential in adjacent neighborhoods trying to pick up on SoHo's cachet. The most obvious inspiration is NoHo, located North of Houston Street. More recent examples include NoLIta, North of Little Italy, and BoHo which is the area surrounding the Bowery south of Houston Street.
Other attempts by realtors to make neighborhoods sound upscale failed, especially in "Clinton", which residents continue to call "Hell's Kitchen".
The trend has also spread beyond Manhattan. The former Pigtown, Brooklyn became Wingate, Brooklyn early in the 20th century. At mid-century, the prosperous portions of South Brooklyn north of Gowanus Expressway and west of Gowanus Canal successfully dissociated themselves from Red Hook and became known by several local names. Late in the century the term BoCoCa was applied with less success by the medial capital method to encompass these neighborhoods of Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill, and Carroll Gardens. The more successful Dumbo, in Downtown Brooklyn, stands for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass. DoBro is a recently created name describing the Downtown Brooklyn business district along Fulton Street.
The Riverdale section of the Bronx, just North of Manhattan is called NoMa
Read more about Neighborhood Rebranding In New York City: Proposed Legislation
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