If someone is bored, you can do the same exact thing in St Louis near the Delmar Divide. Especially near Forest Park and CWE. A couple streets north and a couple streets south of Delmar might as well be different worlds.
Is Grosse Pointe particularly affluent? I know about white flight and all that, but so many households being above 200k income seems quite high.
Also, does Detroit just not have data on that part of the city or are all of those abandoned blocks?
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Parcel geometry, land use, occupancy, and Esri demographic data from [Regrid parcel data](https://support.regrid.com/parcel-data/schema?_gl=1*1hzdphz*_gcl_au*MTczMTYwOTg5MS4xNzM0MTAyNTkz*_ga*NjAwMjM3Njg0LjE3MzM5NDIyNjc.*_ga_NGWML8455J*MTczODYxODI2Mi4xNS4xLjE3Mzg2MTg4NTUuMC4wLjA). Map made in [ArcGIS Online](https://www.arcgis.com/index.html).
Grosse Point is 3.3% black compared to the city of Detroit which is 77% black
One can basically see the legacy of redlining and de jure racial segregation.
[https://detroitography.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/detroitholc-med_2000.png](https://detroitography.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/detroitholc-med_2000.png)
If someone is bored, you can do the same exact thing in St Louis near the Delmar Divide. Especially near Forest Park and CWE. A couple streets north and a couple streets south of Delmar might as well be different worlds.
Is Grosse Pointe particularly affluent? I know about white flight and all that, but so many households being above 200k income seems quite high.
Also, does Detroit just not have data on that part of the city or are all of those abandoned blocks?
What’s the name of a dividing street?
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