Atlantica - 01.09.2003, Qupperneq 20

Atlantica - 01.09.2003, Qupperneq 20
18 A T L A N T I C A weekend sticking to a small stretch of Manhattan. That is to say, a stretch lead- ing from the whitewashed, cobble- stoned designer world of SoHo, through Little Italy and China Town, to the Lower East Side, which used to be considered one of Manhattan’s worst slums. On this 2.5-kilometre-wide slice of NYC, between the Hudson River and the East River, you can sample the whole wide world in a single hour’s walk. It helps to carry a wallet thick with cred- it cards with a healthy credit line if you plan to do anything more than window- shop in SoHo. Here you’ll find all the top designers: Ralph Lauren, Prada, Marc Jacobs, Vivienne Westwood, Chanel and Helmut Lang, to name but a few. The restaurants aren’t bad either, or the hotels (The Mercer, 60 Thompson and SoHo Grand), but the same rule applies here – you have to be willing to part with loads of cash to conduct regular busi- ness here. But SoHo hasn’t always been this way. Little more than three decades have passed since the neighbourhood was in rapid decline. The stately iron-clad buildings were all deteriorating due to the migration of light manufacturing to the suburbs. Left behind were huge, empty floors that artists found perfect for studios and homes. It was in the Scenes from SoHo, clockwise from left: down Green Street; enjoying the night at Felix; street vendors hawking their goods on West Broadway; kicking back on West Broadway. early seventies when city authorities finally admitted that hundreds of artists lived in housing that was officially only recognised as commercial. Realising this influx was a chance to save the area, city officials began granting per- mission for changes in zoning status. They did, however, make it a prerequi- site that the prospective inhabitants should be artists. It was in this way that SoHo grew into an artist’s colony locat- ed in the middle of Manhattan. Today SoHo is one of the most expen- sive and sophisticated neighbourhoods in New York, and although there are still a few artists residing in the area, many of them have sold the lofts they bought 016-022 ATL 503 NY 21.8.2003 10:31 Page 18
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Atlantica

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