
Pilsen Neighborhood
South side of Chicago
Taking a stroll down any street attests to the viability of a neighborhood
that must be preserved, in its entirety, at all costs. The simple
act of turning a corner can reveal a mural exploding from the side
of a building. A garage door becomes an artist's canvas, telling
the story of a community and its people to anyone who passes by.
In a neighborhood starved for green space, the street becomes a
ball field and chairs hastily borrowed from the kitchen table instantly
transform the sidewalk into a welcoming front porch. The instinct
to place flowerpots on a windowsill, on the front steps, or on any
other horizontal surface seldom goes unfulfilled. Fences are not
fences, but art galleries and, what would be an ordinary sidewalk
sale in any other Chicago neighborhood, in Pilsen becomes an outdoor
Bazaar. Pushcarts selling ices and other delectable Mexican treats
ply the streets or are found strategically parked on busy corners,
and a constant chorus of children's voices underscores it all. Even
the faded and peeling paint lends an aura of charming realness in
a city whose current administration favors newness and suburban
sterility.
To get an idea of what Pilsen may look like in five years, a short
drive north may provide some answers. The East Village neighborhood
began an intense debate over its future about 10 years ago when
rampant speculative redevelopment began to transform its historic
but run down streets. Today, on some blocks, almost every building
has been demolished and replaced with luxury housing.
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