Gentrification has displaced over 500,000 Black residents since 1980, erasing culture, history, and political power in cities from Watts to Washington. Once-thriving Black neighborhoods are now unrecognizable, replaced by newcomers and government subsidized undocumented immigrants, mostly from Middle and South America, while longtime residents are priced out. Revitalization without inclusion is displacement. The question is not whether cities grow, but who gets to stay and wh
Concord Court brings 60 townhomes to West Compton, starting at $570K—well above what locals earning the $62K median income can afford. Gentrification Masked as Progress?
Despite local politicians’ praise, the development hints more at early-stage gentrification than meaningful uplift.
Concord Court feels aimed at first-time buyers from outside the area, not at solving Compton’s housing shortage for its existing residents.