Feature Article

The South End Is So Over

Overrun with velvet ropes, $8 tomatoes, and a Washington-Street-by-way-of-Route-9 crowd, the South End has some once proud residents wondering just what the hell happened to the former hippest neighborhood in town.

By MC Slim JB

Line of the Times: Another night, another wait outside the Beehive.

Photo by Mark Ostow.

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Depending on what day of the week you visit the Beehive, the six-month-old Tremont Street hot spot, you will have to negotiate your entrance with either a former courtroom guard named Tyrone or a quartet of giggling women wearing matching headsets. The constant, unless you arrive unfashionably early, is the long line outside, which on the busiest evenings can force a wait of more than an hour and a half. Inside the two-level bar/lounge/eatery/jazz club, the drinks are strong and the décor gorgeously atmospheric, but the food is by all measures just okay. Yet the crowds, by some freak of restaurant fortune, aren’t letting up.

Considering the Beehive is run by the owners of nearby hipster-endorsed stalwarts Bob’s Southern Bistro and Pho Republique, you might expect the subterranean space beneath the Cyclorama to draw patrons resembling the ones spotted at those joints: the black and white jazz lovers of the former, the tattooed artists, off-work musicians, and stylish gays of the latter. Instead, the scene is distinctly white, straight, suburban (or buying there soon), and likelier to be sporting khakis, golf shirts, and sweater sets than skinny jeans, indie rock tees, and body art. These are people who do well enough to pay $11 for a cocktail without blinking, and would not look out of place at Back Bay hangouts like Clerys or Abe & Louie’s. They are also the faces of the new (but not necessarily improved) South End.

You wouldn’t know it from the thriving businesses or the still-hot real estate market, but there is a growing chorus of Bostonians who believe this has been the year the South End as they knew and loved it died, became hopelessly passé, jumped the shark. These critics—disaffected current or former residents, mostly—contend that the neighborhood has rapidly declined from an über-hip, multicultural melting pot into rich, white-bread uniformity, a shift that proves our city deserves its reputation as an unstylish, provincial burg irredeemably stratified by race and class. This scathing perspective is perhaps best expressed on The South End Is Over (thesouthendisover.blogspot.com), a year-old blog penned by a gay longtime South End resident under the tagline “If you lived here, you’d be pretentious by now” (and from which the title of this article is, with apologies, borrowed). If the South End was Boston’s last great chance to put a star on the national coolness map, the argument goes, then we blew it, quickly overdeveloping everything wonderful about it into oblivion.

And that’s because those prosperous, conventional-looking types lining up to get into the Beehive aren’t just visiting the neighborhood in ever greater numbers. They’re moving in—and, by God, they’re taking over.


 

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Posted by Anonymous | Oct. 30, 2007 at 8:30 PM
COMMENT:
it's always great to see people who grew up in the suburbs and consider themselves hip and chic bash other people for moving into the city so that they too can be hip and chic.
we feel your pain!
Posted by Rob | Oct. 31, 2007 at 11:48 AM
COMMENT:
The gentrification is a trend repeated many times over -- I just wish the unfriendliness/obnoxiousness didn't come with it. Our "neighbors" mostly drive in and out from their underground parking spots and don't LIVE here. The height of our bad experience was the woman who brought her dog from her loft building to the courtyard in our development (instead of the dog park nextdoor) to do its business, and when we took her to task, she called us "fudge packers" and told us to go back inside our subsidized housing! Nice. Welcome to the South End.
Negative Garbage
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 1, 2007 at 1:45 PM
COMMENT:
I get it...no really...the writer is truly "Edgy" and "Out of the Box" I'm sure they were the first to have a flannel around their waist in the 90's and hates all things "pop culture" - The truth of the matter is the same people that are that make up your readership are moving into the south end...thanks for bashing...
So Sad, But True
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 1, 2007 at 2:00 PM
COMMENT:
I moved to the South End in 1990 and spent 16 fantastic years there as a renter and later, as an owner in 3 different locations. But by about 2003 it became clear that the neighborhood was quickly changing. Even then, it felt like most of what *I* loved about the neighborhood was gone. So my partner of 12 years (yes, we met in the South End) and I bought a house in Roslindale (which we LOVE, by the way). I don't begrudge the new South End residents - things change, but I do feel sad that they will never know the FABULOUS South End that I knew and loved. I was lucky to have lived there when I did.
Unfair. Why is it ok to bash me and not gays or blacks?
Posted by Mike | Nov. 2, 2007 at 11:06 AM
COMMENT:
I am one of the people apparently ruining the South End. I am white, straight, married and have an MBA. And I love the South End. It is my favorite Boston neighborhood by far. How is it cool or OK to bash people for being white and straight and having professional jobs and advanced degrees? (aka Yuppies) What if this article were about black people or gay people moving into a neighborhood and "ruining the charm"? Boston Magazine would have a lot of apologies to write and the author would be fired. The South End is a fabulous melting pot of lots of different people, including people like me. I really think that while it might be "cool" to bash people like me, it is just as biased or racist or unfair as to bash any other group of people. PS - I'm cancelling my subscription to Boston Magazine.
i moved out of the south end because of this
Posted by dave | Nov. 2, 2007 at 11:12 AM
COMMENT:
after living in the south end for over 12 years, I finally moved away due to all the things detailed in this article. You can't get groceries, or bring an affordable dinner home from work but you can get baby clothes, high-end furniture, more haircuts and skin care than you can handle. All the family and mom n' pop shops are gone... and once the eagle goes, so does the queer history and don't worry - Boston Magazine readers will be sure that happens!!
Poor bashed yuppies
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 2, 2007 at 4:44 PM
COMMENT:
"I'm canceling my subscription to Boston Magazine." I'm sure your keeping your eight bucks is really gonna hurt 'em. The article I read doesn't blanket bash yuppies, just the obnoxious ones. The article makes the obvious point that people like you always suck the character out of whatever neighborhood they move into. Be proud of your blandness and lack of style, flaunt it! I'm sure it helped you become the success you are. How many MBAs get ahead by being artsy and colorful? If some hipster twit mocks your fashion sense, you can always comfort yourself by rolling around in a pile of money.
Plus ca change ....
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 3, 2007 at 10:23 AM
COMMENT:
I moved to the South End 9 years ago and they've been the best years of my life. I'm invested in this neighborhood unlike many of my yuppie neighbors who are here for 3 to 5 years and then off to the burbs as soon as the kids come. One thing that I've noticed is that people pay lip service to the diversity in the South End but when you get right down to the nitty gritty their multi-ethnic friends all grew up in nice middle class enclaves, went off to nice colleges and generally share the same values. I've made an effort to make friends all over the South End and that includes people who live in Section 8/low income housing. And my life is richer as a result. Those opportunities are available to anyone who takes the time to reach out and embrace this vibrancy. I wouldn't want to live anyplace else.
i feel all your pain....
Posted by Rob | Nov. 4, 2007 at 2:09 PM
COMMENT:
[damn, that's like an answering maching that cuts me off. where was I?] Oh, there are people who've lived here for 20 years who think that way. Point is, no matter what your pedigree, or # of years in the 'hood, it's what kind of neighbor you are, and do you add to the life of the neighborhood. [Don't get me started on a couple of the uppity restaurants who are here for the profitable years and then we won't see them again....] Oh, and Dave Greenblatt.... seems I should walk the walk more. Didn't realize you had moved. The SE is a bit worse off for that.
i feel all your pain....
Posted by Rob | Nov. 4, 2007 at 2:09 PM
COMMENT:
!!okay, i'm gonna get corny here!! I think you all make good points. And I think none of you is part of the problem which is why you read, respond, or in other words are ENGAGED. Mike V-- I'd hang with you, and you're absolutely right, bashing anybody for any reason is obnoxious, and somebody being in a majority population does in no way make it okay. "So Sad But True", the SE was different -- and great -- for a population of people before you, and is now for another population since you've moved. I think the problems come from the problem people, the most glaring of which is the sort of person MC SLIM JB referenced who moved here 3 years ago and now feels he can tell others what to do with their property, what kinds of people can live on his street. The transitional housing is a great addition to a neighborhood, and for the moron who's opposing it: it's guys on their way UP, who are making strides, and not the poor souls who are having issues. And there are people who've lived here
I fet the pain too
Posted by D | Nov. 6, 2007 at 11:10 AM
COMMENT:
I moved to the SE in '97 because of its diverse charm. I've noted to several friends over the past 5 years, about how its changing. Its seems as tho there are baby carriages everywhere and its practically impossible to get a decent meal for one under $30. I've done what many are doing - I sold my condo and left. There isn't another neighborhood that compared to the one I fell in love with in '97.
Tired of the blame
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 6, 2007 at 4:07 PM
COMMENT:
I see it. I really do. I have witnessed that obnoxious transition. I equally get ill from the people moving in and them moving out the the burbs, or the people who move in and 3 years later try to influence "their" neighborhood. What bothers me is the assumption that all in twin sweater sets and Peals are bad, non- cool people. Just because some people do not fit into the mold of skinny jeans an 80's t shirt and a f faux hawk, does not mean those people are not cool, hip, or simply interesting to be around!. I get so tired of this stereotype that because some one doesn't put the hipster costume on every morning that they must there for be ruining your neighborhood. Maybe they moved there to get away from the back bay pretension and self entitled BS.
Stop being so f-ing dense
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 7, 2007 at 12:53 AM
COMMENT:
For God’s sake, “Tired of the blame”: you don’t really think the article is about “twin sets vs. skinny jeans”, do you? The point is the contrast between the old neighborhood, which was diverse and mutually tolerant across a broad range of scales (including but not limited to race, class, sexual orientation, and profession), and the new neighborhood, which suddenly includes a lot of people who don’t appear to appreciate the old diversity, and instead seem to want to remake the neighborhood into what they came from: mostly wealthy, white, straight, conventionally dull. To put it terms of your simplistic fashion sensibility: the old neighbors would have embraced the person novel and weird enough to unironically wear a sweater set. The new neighbors can’t conceive of a place where a sweater set might be worn with irony. The difference is the willingness to connect, to reach out to otherness with empathy. That’s what the newcomers so desperately lack.
Blame take 2
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 7, 2007 at 9:54 AM
COMMENT:
Ahhh yes. I would be great friends with those who wear it in irony. I do not dilute your issue or what you are saying. I agree with many aspects of this article, since I have lived in the SE for 18 years. What I am tired of are all these lovely reviews of places in Boston magazine, Boston Globe, Dig, etc that constantly assume that those who do not fit into a hipster look are therefore people not worth associating with. But I thank you for assuming I am so stupid that I could not draw an abstract point from the article. A point I have seen one to many times in that last 8 months of bashing all things new in the South End. If Uber Hip South enders are not the first in line then all places must be bashed for being B&T
hipsters
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 7, 2007 at 11:59 AM
COMMENT:
Q: How do know that a hipster is hip and interesting? A: They tell you they are. Seriously, your self proclamation that you and your wife fit in to real SE and are interesting doesn't make it so. Your relentless pursuit of being hip by bashing other that don't appear so is just so tired and boring. -signed yuppie/musician/artist that is probably hipper than you.
How do you contribute?
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 7, 2007 at 7:50 PM
COMMENT:
Mike V and others. I'm sorry to read that all you saw was a 'bashing' theme in the article. If you step back you see the article is about the neighborhood, and how many of the changes are turning it from a neighborhood in spirit to a neighborhood in name only. If you live here, what have you contributed to it? How do you make the south end a nice place to live? Not where do you spend your money. I mean how do YOU help make it a neighborhood? How many neighbors do you know? How often are you on your front stoop to say high to those who live around you? How many neighborhood meetings or clean-ups have you attended? Did you attend the public meeting with our City Councilor last week? I've been here for 10 years. I can no longer afford to shop at any local stores. There are only a small handful of restaurants I can afford to eat at. But that doesn't make me sad. Having neighbors that don't say hi back. Going to a meeting to see 4 people show up makes me sad.
we need to stop
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 8, 2007 at 2:22 PM
COMMENT:
Oeople PLEASEEEE, we need to stop, i do think the writing was poor,this is a great place to live and work, but most inportant, we need to know, that everything / everywhere will change with time, no matter what , it will change , so, lets mouve on and do the best we can with the best we have( south end)!!! GREAT PLACE TO BE!!!!
Wow
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 8, 2007 at 4:58 PM
COMMENT:
I've lived in the South End for 10 years and own a small business here. I also happen to wear khakis and even sometimes pants with whales on them. I don't have any tattoos and haven't been able to wear tight jeans since, well, never! I am sad to hear I am not hip, especially since I know some of the folks you tricked into interviewing for this article. Quite frankly, as an openly gay, proudly progressive, and a solid supporter of social services (I have an MSW), I'd much rather have the new types in the South End you belittle than posers like yourself who need a neighborhood, some tattoos, and a grudge to make you feel good about yourself.
Get over yourselves!
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 9, 2007 at 4:17 AM
COMMENT:
The focus of the article was not on the type of clothing one should or should not wear! That was only a sentence or two and was used by the author as a creative vehicle to express an idea. That was not the point of the article. The point was that the South End has become a playground for the obnoxious and entitled. It is filled with displays of repulsive self-centered "me first" behavior that did not exist nearly as much just 3 or 4 years ago. I had never heard an anti-gay, anti-black, anti-homeless comeent from a resident back then. Residents were open minded and knew their neighbors and respected the diversity that existed back then. Now the people who have moved in want to steamroll the neighborhood (that's figuratively, not literally, dense readers) and make it suitable just for them, with no consideration for those who were there before them. I have heard anti-gay, anti-black, anti-Puerto Rican, anti-homeless comments ad nauseum in the last 2 years from my new neighbors, w
Continued
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 9, 2007 at 4:30 AM
COMMENT:
And comments sayng that the people who moved to the South End in the 90's displaced those who were there before them, too, is misguided. The people who moved in in the 80's and 90's were interested in making the neighborhood a better place to live for everyone. There was more of a community, neighborly feel. Now, the new breed only wants to buy showy $8 tomatoes, $900 goose down (goat cheese?) comforters, and care only about themsleves and their own needs. Donating $1000 to a dog park, to be used by yourSELF and others like you is not the same as volunteering in a soup kitchen or cleaning up an unused park and turning it into a garden. Plus, the people moving in are just plain dull!!
"Newcomers" rage about the even "newer newcomers."
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 9, 2007 at 12:16 PM
COMMENT:
As a South Ender since the early 1980s, you can imagine how it amuses me to no end to hear people who have been living in the neighborhood circa 1993 (and think they're long time residents) whine about "rich newcomers ruining their neighborhood." Really....what's rich is the affectations of your blogger and whiners alike :) At least the suburban folks coming into the South End in their Range Rovers make no secret of their attempts at hipness. The tragically hip complainers on the other hand...just plain bitter.
Fair and Balanced? He Reports, We Decide...
Posted by Ged | Nov. 9, 2007 at 12:23 PM
COMMENT:
I write from across the years and the miles as a former outer-edge South End resident. I lived on St Botolph Street in early 1980s after college (out-of-state art school) for several years--$310 rent gives you an idea just how long ago. As such, I really can’t weigh in on the writer’s observations of recent and ongoing changes in the demographics and dynamics of South End; however, what I did note is somewhat lazy, one-sided reporting in this article: where was at least one interview or comment from one of those so-called wide-wale, whale-wearing bar hounds who are clotting up access to the bar the Beehive? Or with one of those twin-set-and-pearl-wearing honeys? Seems like Boston Magazine got ham-burgled by the posturing of a less-than balanced article by Mayor McCheese—er, MC Slim JB.
poor city people
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 12, 2007 at 4:39 PM
COMMENT:
Nothing is more tiresome than oh-so-jaded, too-pretentious city dwellers (you know, the ones who moved here 6 months before someone else and consider themselves "natives") carrying on about how- take your pick- "yuppies" "suburbanites" or others, are running their precious enclaves. Lighten up, and try to embrace some diversity, will ya?
Hello!
Posted by Rick | Nov. 14, 2007 at 8:36 PM
COMMENT:
Can't we all just get along?! Been in the South End since 1988, rented and loved it so much bought my awesome condo that I wouldn't trade for anything. I have a Master's too, who cares, I did it for myself, none else. I think the article was great. Many of the best places in the country have gone through what the South End is going through (Greenwhich Village) Let's Love the South End for what it was, what what it can be! There ain't no stopping it so embrace, it is what you make of it. The South End is my home, make it yours, and make it the best place in Boston, we already know it is!
Hypocrisy, anyone?
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 16, 2007 at 2:54 PM
COMMENT:
Does the majority gay population in the South End think that the blue-collar residents who inhabited the South End for decades were thrilled when the neighborhood was overrun by gays in '90s? I doubt it. One shouldn't expect to be tolerated if they're intolerant of others.
Typical Anti Gay Remark, above
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 17, 2007 at 6:15 AM
COMMENT:
Ok, I'M the blogger referred to in the article. That last comment about the neighborhood being "overrun by gays" is typical of the new South Enders and is the reason why the blog was created in the first place. Get it through your Blueberry Coolada soaked Bostonian skull: The whole point is that the new wave of South enders is highly INTOLERANT of people not like themselves. The gays who might have populated the South End in the 80's and 90's WERE in fact tolerant of those that were there before them and worked to make the neighborhood a better place. Unlike the selfish new wave of yuppies who care only about themselves.
Still a melting Pot
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 20, 2007 at 4:20 PM
COMMENT:
Its evolution, Once SoHo, Tribeca and Meat packing district in NY were what south end is going through. It is important that diversity and Artistic community is alive and stays alive in South End. There are artist studios and BRA designated artists Lofts in all corners of South End, lots of diversity from Villa Vittoria to Castle square. May be less than before, but safer nevertheless. New developments are still tied into old character of the neighborhood. From D-4 by Philip Starck to Art block and Gateway Terrace, there is so much more being offered in the neighborhood. The fact that people want to come to my neighborhood is not a bad sign, I take it as positive. Since we are the neighborhood, its people living here, neighborhood communities that have to sustain the change. Just because there is a line outside the Beehive, you don't have to go there. Upscale dining is a nationwide trend and not just southend. This article and the Title of the article is so misleading. It should say "
I'm so glad....
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 30, 2007 at 8:02 AM
COMMENT:
...that I live in Dorchester!
Obnoxiousness of valet parking
Posted by Anonymous | Mar. 7, 2008 at 9:05 AM
COMMENT:
With such a proliferation of parking spaces, it is harder than ever to park these days -- becuase all the chi-chi patrons of these fou-fou restaurants need VALET spaces. So after 5pm hundreds of legit spaces are unavailable. What a corrupt racket! ARGGGGGGGGG
Funny Stuff
Posted by Anonymous | Mar. 12, 2008 at 10:06 PM
COMMENT:
When I moved to Washington St in 1986, my view was of the elevated Orange Line, I could literally smile at people in the train. Things have IMPROVED so much since then. Has the old South End gone away, yes. Is it better? Yes. People would not go south of Columbus, never mind Washington. The old South End was filled with urban pioneers, artists musicians, and people of all color and races. Thats what pioneers do, they pave the way for others. I do miss: Thayer St loft parties, Doc's Cafe rock shows (across from Blanchard's), the Big House loft @ 500 Harrison, the Paramount Deli, the vegetable store on Shawmut, Harry the Greeks, Dover Station @ JJ Foley's, the ORIGINAL Bob the Chef. But this is nostalgia, and that is boring for those who didn't live it.
pretentiousness vs. true meaning of living with beauty in mind
Posted by k | Apr. 16, 2008 at 3:10 PM
COMMENT:
I have never written on a public page, but today, I am. I stumbled into an antique/high end home goodie store today called Tour de France in SOWA district. The pretentiousness and rudeness of the shop owner were beyond words. I and my husband, both in our mid 40s, moved to Boston a few months ago becasue of his job (he works as a physician at Brigham & Womens), and I do 2D visual art works. We did not choose this area for that "hipness", but needed some place where we could have easy access to works and art supply store in Mass Ave (at least bike rides), in a building not too hazardously old, as we have 8 yr old girl who goes to a montesorri school 25 min walk away. I don't wear pearls, do not wear name brand scarf, we travel much for many reasons, we walk or bike, buy essential, thoughtfully-made stuff, do not eat out that much, and as someone who has many friends and colleagues who have unconventional ways of life, whether the neighbors are gay or straight or multi-pierced do not mat

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