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CHELSEA
Chelsea is the epicenter of New York’s gay life. It is home to a large
gay population stereotyped as gym-toned “Chelsea Boys”. On 8th
Avenue, Chelsea’s main gay drag, this cliché becomes true: Good-looking
men, proud of their physiques, are walking up and down between 14th
and 23rd
Street. A lot of fashion boutiques targeting a gay crowd, are located on
8th
Avenue, next to gay bars and stylish restaurants. The neighborhood not
only contains most of New York’s gay clubs, but also many other
nightclubs and bars. So-called “Club Row” on 27th
Street between 10th
and 11th
Avenues alone contains no fewer than nine hot-spots.
Chelsea started to become a gay and lesbian Mecca in the mid-1970s, when
many gays from the West Village, who couldn’t afford to live there
anymore, sought for cheaper housing opportunities not too far away.
During that time, Chelsea
wasn't
that safe for gay people as it
is now. In response to a lot of anti-gay bashings, which took place at
that time, the gay community successfully accomplished its goals to
establish an organized gay presence in the neighborhood and was able to
become a part of community politics. Today, while the western part of
Chelsea is home to one of the city’s art gallery scenes, it’s more
residential part between 6th
and 9th
Avenues has experienced an immense increase in rent prices in the last
decades, which led to a strong yuppification of the neighborhood.
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