Nobudrichard wrote:Anyone else have the same impressions?-Dick
G Wiv wrote:Nobudrichard wrote:Anyone else have the same impressions?-Dick
alain40 wrote:As somebody who has been addicted to Vietnamese food since the early fifties (in France when Vietnam was part of French Indochina), has been eating in the Argyle district since the very early 70's, continues to shop there about 6 to 8 times a year at Viet-Hoa on Argyle and lunches occasionally in that area, may I suggest a few non-scientific explanations:
The % of actual Vietnamese population in that area has decreased considerably over the last 10 years . Many families moved to more hospitable districts and to the suburbs. That explains the fact that many Vietnamese restaurants that originated around Argyle and Broadway have now moved to the suburbs and other neighborhoods in the Western and Northwestern sections of the city (like Nha Trang) .
Nowadays Chicago restaurant-goers are more sophisticated and demanding as far as their knowledge and quality of Vietnamese food is concerned. Therefore they are focusing on better located, cleaner, and more versatile in terms of menus, venues to satisfy their craving of Vietnamese food. These restaurants are often mentioned in the local press and magazines and this is not the case for the Argyle restaurants, except for the much over-rated Tank.
Argyle, many years ago when Daley became mayor, was supposed to benefit from large private investment and city support to become a real second "China" town. But that project never materialized and poverty, drugs, hygiene, and gang-related problems continued to plague that district of the city.
No wonder it never fully developed into a popular, attractive to both Chicagoans and tourists, eating district the way the area between Archer,Cermak and Wentworth has become....
Only Broadway improved somewhat and attracted new small family Vietnamese and Thai eateries.
AlekH wrote:I'm not going to pretend to have lived in the neighborhood and long time, so it may very well have been like this for decades. Scaryisn't the word I would use, but living a block away and frequenting the stretch 3-4x a week, I regularly see drug dealing, excessive panhandling, vomit on sidewalks and mentally unstable and/or high folks milling about, not to mention gun planearby on a couple occasions. It hasn't kept me from the area, but i certainly see how others would be uncomfotable, especially as a destination from the suburbs where people may have a lower tolerance for the delights of urban living.
Argyle energy waxes and wanes as does perceived rough neighborhood. Part of the current perception problem on Arglye may be a few stores have not been rebuild since the fire, add Sun Wah moving to a larger location on Broadway and empty store fronts are more in evidence.ronnie_suburban wrote:Saturdays (especially mornings) used to be bustling and energetic on Argyle but it's just not at the level it used to be, IMO.
G Wiv wrote:Argyle energy waxes and wanes as does perceived rough neighborhood. Part of the current perception problem on Arglye may be a few stores have not been rebuild since the fire, add Sun Wah moving to a larger location on Broadway and empty store fronts are more in evidence.ronnie_suburban wrote:Saturdays (especially mornings) used to be bustling and energetic on Argyle but it's just not at the level it used to be, IMO.
I tend not to think of neighborhoods except in terms of culinary treasure, but when I first started going to Arglye it was considerably rougher than present. If one rarely ventures south of Madison Argyle's current city scape may well seem sketchy.
I visit Argyle on a regular basis including Viet Hoa and have not noticed decline in product or uptick in sketchy. Not to say there are no hijinks's on and around Argyle, just that I have not noted an increase.
Enjoy,
Gary
jlawrence01 wrote:And I wold be less excited about walking more than 3-4 blocks east of Broadway on Argyle.
d4v3 wrote:Argyle street and the surrounding area is going through the same cycles that Uptown has been experiencing for 100 years. New immigrants to Chicago, whether they be the white southerners who moved to Uptown in the mid 1960s or the Vietnamese who moved there in the late 1970s, tend to first settle where the rents are cheap, the neighbors are less judgmental, and where they can be close to their own kind. As the newcomers begin to prosper from new businesses and as their cultures are assimilated into the melting pot that is Chicago, they move their families to better neighborhoods or the suburbs, while leaving the businesses in the original locations. Eventually, there are not enough people left in the "old" neigborhood to support the businesses, and the former residents are not as willing to travel from the suburbs to shop for familiar goods, so the stores and restaurants close and re-open in the suburbs or more affluent neighborhoods, making way for the next group of immigrants looking for cheap digs.
nsxtasy wrote:jlawrence01 wrote:And I wold be less excited about walking more than 3-4 blocks east of Broadway on Argyle.
If you keep walking more than 4 blocks east of Broadway on Argyle, you'll soon be underwater.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Saturdays (especially mornings) used to be bustling and energetic on Argyle but it's just not at the level it used to be, IMO.
budrichard wrote:I spent Saturday morning from 0930 to 1130 on Argyle Street shopping and having Spring Rolls and Pho. I had not been on Argyle for a number of years and quickly noticed a number of business's no longer open and some vacant locations. I also noticed the usual hustle and bustle was gone, even at 1130 when I left. I wonder if the numerous suburban ethnic locations for groceries and restaurants are attracting customers that years ago would have frequented Argyle on Saturday morning.
I did have excellent Spring Rolls and Special Pho at Pho 777. The beef broth had a predominately cinnamon aroma and taste and the meats were excellent as well as the condiments. I like more star anise in my preparations but to each chef his own. Very good service and prices. My previous favorite spot was gone.
Went into Sea World to possibly purchase crab/lobster. Tanks and atmosphere seemed grimy and I declined to purchase any.
Went to the Tai Nam market on Broadway and purchased Ba Le supplies, periwinkles, and two type of clams as well as hopefully an authentic Vietnamese Mam Nem, heavy, non clear 'Super.1l Huong V! Que Nha' with no sugar. Checkout lady asked me if I liked it and said it was the best and to add chilies to it, of course! Gave me free ice for my cooler for the trip home. Only negative were the panhandlers that were on the sidewalk.
I stopped at Fresh Farms for veal and lamb products and then H-Mart which was its usual bustling self and I wonder what affect H-Mart has had on people who previously might have shopped on Argyle.
Anyone else have the same impressions?-Dick
trpt2345 wrote:nsxtasy wrote:jlawrence01 wrote:And I wold be less excited about walking more than 3-4 blocks east of Broadway on Argyle.
If you keep walking more than 4 blocks east of Broadway on Argyle, you'll soon be underwater.
Let's see, heading east on Argyle from Broadway: Winthrop, Kenmore, Sheridan, and then a long block to Marine Drive. No water, for that you'd need to then go through the park, under Lake Shore Drive, then another quarter mile or so to the lake.
JeffB wrote:For whatever reason, Sunday seems to be the bigger shopping day.
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:Maybe I just have a really high sketch tolerance, but I never got a bad vibe on Argyle.
eatchicago wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Saturdays (especially mornings) used to be bustling and energetic on Argyle but it's just not at the level it used to be, IMO.
I agree.
Fifteen or so years ago, a weekend morning on Argyle was so crowded with Asian families that it was hard to get down the sidewalk. Parking was nearly impossible. Markets and restaurants were bursting with people. I'd estimate that it's dropped 50% or so. It seems particularly desolate to me now.
I'd chalk this up to population migration, as other people have noted. The population of these particular ethnicities is no longer primarily located around that corner.
If not for Arabs and Pakistanis moving into the Devon area, the same would have happened there as well. As a couple generations of Indian immigrants have now found success in Chicago, A high percentage of Indian families have moved away from Devon. Fortunately for Devon Ave. the peak arrival of other ethnicities lagged the immigration of Indians and kept the neighborhood vibrant.
Katie wrote:I've got no experience on visiting Argyle in particular that qualifies me to comment on it, but I just wanted to say that this comment strikes me as conveying a positive
eatchicago wrote:Katie wrote:I've got no experience on visiting Argyle in particular that qualifies me to comment on it, but I just wanted to say that this comment strikes me as conveying a positive
Yes, it is conveying a positive. Although, I was trying to highlight the fact that while neighborhoods that are attractive to immigrants change over time, some have a smooth transition (Devon Ave) while others can seem a bit bumpier at times.
jbw wrote:eatchicago wrote:Katie wrote:I've got no experience on visiting Argyle in particular that qualifies me to comment on it, but I just wanted to say that this comment strikes me as conveying a positive
Yes, it is conveying a positive. Although, I was trying to highlight the fact that while neighborhoods that are attractive to immigrants change over time, some have a smooth transition (Devon Ave) while others can seem a bit bumpier at times.
For a more academic take on this see Japonica Brown-Saracino, A Neighborhood That Never Changes:
Gentrification, Social Preservation, and the Search for Authenticity which uses the Argyle Street area as on of its four case studies (Andersonville, Provincetown and Dresden, ME are the others). More here:
http://www.press.uchicago.edu/presssite ... ey=8066321
nsxtasy wrote:trpt2345 wrote:
Let's see, heading east on Argyle from Broadway: Winthrop, Kenmore, Sheridan, and then a long block to Marine Drive. No water, for that you'd need to then go through the park, under Lake Shore Drive, then another quarter mile or so to the lake.
Yes, exactly as I said.
It seems like there's always someone who just has to "explain" (or attack) the jokes instead of just enjoying them...
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:Maybe I just have a really high sketch tolerance, but I never got a bad vibe on Argyle. There are areas immediately surrounding it that I wouldn't wander alone, but the street itself is just fine.