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In season two of 海角破解版's "Inside the Bricks" podcast, host Justin Glanville talks to his neighbors about whether their Cleveland neighborhood can stay diverse or if it鈥檚 on a one-way journey toward becoming completely gentrified.

My Changing Neighborhood - Episode 1: The house with the birdbath

A photo shows a view of Downtown Cleveland and the Detroit Shoreway neighborhood.
Justin Glanville
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海角破解版
The Gordon Square or Detroit Shoreway neighborhood in Cleveland has seen housing prices triple in the last five years.

In the first season of Inside the Bricks, I focused on a neighborhood on the brink of a complete rebuild. The neighborhood was , on Cleveland's East Side.

As I was wrapping up that season, I started thinking about my own neighborhood, . It, too, was going through some major changes. Not everything was being torn down and rebuilt, as at Woodhill Homes. But just walking or driving around, it seemed like every day I saw new 鈥淔or Sale鈥 signs in front of freshly flipped houses, going for five or six times what I'd paid for my house. A crane or backhoe rumbling to life on a newly fenced construction site.

I started to feel like I wanted to do in my neighborhood what I鈥檇 done in the first season: to take a step back and talk to real people, my own neighbors this time, about how they felt seeing the changes happening around them.

My husband Ted and I love this neighborhood as it exists now. We wanted to live in a neighborhood where not everyone makes the same amount of money as we do (some have lower incomes, some way higher), or are white like we are or hold the same political beliefs as we do. For us, all that difference feels more like living in the real world. And frankly, being 鈥渄ifferent鈥 ourselves 鈥 i.e., two men raising a kid 鈥 we just feel more comfortable in a place where all kinds of people are welcome.

In my experience, there aren鈥檛 many places in the world that feel that way. But it also feels like the welcoming atmosphere might not last much longer, if things continue the way they鈥檙e going. Is there any way to preserve the feeling of openness?

And, to take a step back, do my neighbors feel the same way I do, that this neighborhood is at an idyllic moment in its history? Maybe people from different backgrounds feel the neighborhood is going in the wrong direction. Or, conversely, that it still has to get even fancier or more expensive before it鈥檒l be really great.

That鈥檚 some of what I want to explore in this series. And I hope, even if you live in a neighborhood completely unlike mine, the stories you鈥檒l hear will make you think in new ways about where you live. And maybe even inspire you, in this time of social isolation that started even before the COVID-19 pandemic, to get to know your neighbors better, too.

We鈥檒l be doing it by looking at a different house, building or spot in the neighborhood each episode. We鈥檒l look behind the fa莽ade to the people who built it, live in it, use it 鈥 and have real conversations about why neighborhoods change and how that feels.

Welcome to "Inside the Bricks: My Changing Neighborhood. Episode 1: The house with the birdbath." Otherwise known as my house.

Justin Glanville is the deputy editor of engaged journalism at 海角破解版.