Difference between revisions of "“Bottom feeder” Bars to Upscale “Metrosexual” Bars"

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The imagined queer, working-class utopia did not emerge. Undermining the bar economy in particular were the skyrocketing commercial rents during the dot.com boom, the erosion of the cooperative bartender networks, an aging gay bar-going population, and the emergence of the Internet as a social marketing tool and low-cost advertising method for commercialized sex.  
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Text by Joey Plaster. Copyright (©) by C. Joey Plaster, 2009. All rights reserved.
  
Gay bar patronage decreased citywide in the 1980s and 1990s, the result of AIDS-related deaths, a generational shift, and later the rise of the Internet. Reflecting these shifts, the Tavern Guild disbanded in 1995. Many of the Polk Street bar owners, who had purchased the property at the height of the gay bar economy in the 1970s, now retired and sold their bars as bar rents began to increase steadily. Others, such as Marvin Warren, passed away.
 
  
Mirroring the changes in the early 1960s, the faltering queer bars that formed the backbone of the Polk community changed hands and were replaced by upscale, heterosexual and mixed drinking establishments.
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[[Image:Church2.jpg|thumb|Construction of the First Congregational Church, on the site of the former Q.T. and RendezVous bars. 2008.]]The imagined queer, working-class utopia did not emerge. Undermining the gay male bar economy in particular were the skyrocketing commercial rents during the dot.com boom, the erosion of the cooperative bartender networks, an aging gay bar-going population, and the emergence of the Internet as both a social marketing tool and low-cost advertising method for commercialized sex. Reflecting these shifts, the Tavern Guild disbanded in 1995. Many of the Polk Street bar owners, who had purchased the property at the height of the gay bar economy in the 1970s, now retired and sold their bars as bar rents increased. Others, including Marvin Warren, passed away.  
  
At least one owner attempted to change with the times. Kimo Cochran made several changes to keep his bar Kimos profitable from 1977 to 2008. “First all I had to do was open the doors and the crowd was here every day,” he said. After AIDS pummeled business, he organized drag shows with the Imperial Court and other events to draw customers. Then, in the 1990s, he converted his top floor into a space for hip rock bands, drawing a young primarily straight crowd. “I’d say sometime 100% of the crowd is straight up there,” he said.
 
  
Others took a more interventionist approach. In 2000, Steve Black bought out two low-income queer bars across the street from Polk Street’s transgender club Divas – also the center of the city’s transgender prostitution district. He turned bars he called magnets for “bottom-feeder gay men” and a “sex clubs” into upscale bars and took direct steps to change the clientele. “With a vigilante spirit, he drove the transgender prostitutes out of the Lush Lounge, which landed him in a hearing with the San Francisco Human Rights Commission,” according to a 2006 article. “He also chased drug dealers off the sidewalk.”
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Mirroring the changes in the early 1960s, the faltering queer bars that formed the backbone of the Polk community became havens for young artists and “hipsters,” or upscale, heterosexual and mixed drinking establishments.
  
“His formula not only has worked to attract young barhoppers (most straight, some gay) but also is inspiring a new social scene. Alongside the R Bar are Hemlock, a wide-open space where bands play, and Blur, a narrow lounge with a red-velvet booth and a sushi bar.”
 
  
In 2005, the San Francisco Bay Times noted “a trend …over the last few years as [Polk Street] Gay bars change hands, redecorate…then put in a bid for a new clientele; often straight, or predominantly ethnic or specifically higher toned—or in other words, hustler-free zones.” 
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Bar owner Kimo Cochran made several changes to keep his bar “Kimos” profitable from 1977 to 2008. “First all I had to do was open the doors and the crowd was here every day,” he said. He organized drag shows after the onset of AIDS pummeled business, and in the 1990s hosted rock bands, drawing a young, primarily heterosexual crowd. “I’d say sometime 100% of the crowd is straight up there,” he said.<ref> Interview with Kimo Cochran by Joey Plaster, 2008. </ref>
  
Ron Case and his wife Carolyn Abst, attracted to the area by its low rents in 1999, renovated a building and set up an architecture studio and living space around the corner from Black’s shop. Steve Black was one of the first people they met. “He came over and welcomed us to the area and started telling us some of the problems,” Case said. “And he’s investing in the neighborhood and trying to clean [it] up, least his area.”
 
  
In 2001, they founded the neighborhood association Lower Polk Neighbors in 2001, which planted trees and cleaned sidewalks as part of “beautification” efforts, and successfully pressured the city officials to increase the number of police patrols in the area. In one of their most controversial actions, the neighborhood association opposed the relocation of the RendezVous bar in 2005, when it lost its lease and sought to move to empty storefront down the street.  
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Others bar owners reached a similar outcome by taking a more interventionist approach. In 2000, Steve Black bought out two gay bars across the street from Polk Street’s transgender club Divas – also the center of the city’s transgender prostitution district. He turned what he called magnets for “bottom-feeder gay men” into upscale bars, taking direct steps to change the clientele.  
  
In the early 2000s, the bar was the only business open on a block of closed storefronts, and the association blamed them for the street population that gathered in front and the shuttered buildings in front of and on either side of the bar. By this time, the neighborhood a $90,000 grant for from the Department for Public Works “for beautification issues,” Case said. “Then you’re walking along the street and …there used to be young kids all up and down Polk Street, and [in front of RendezVous] was the last vestige of kids on the street that we saw.”
 
  
The same year, restaurant owner Myles O’Reilly spent six million dollars to purchase and renovate a shuttered building on Polk Street across the street from the RendezVous bar. He would later open a high-end restaurant called O’Reilly’s Holy Grail. O’Reilly credits his financial investment in the area, the neighborhood association “decided to crank up the involvement of the merchants,” creating a fund to hire private security and steam clean the alleyways, a favorite site for hustling and drug dealing. “They were just a playground for undesirables and that’s all the alleys were being used for.”
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“With a vigilante spirit,a 2006 article read, “he drove the transgender prostitutes out of the Lush Lounge [and] “chased drug dealers off the sidewalk,” leading to a hearing with the San Francisco Human Rights Commission. “His formula not only has worked to attract young barhoppers (most straight, some gay) but also is inspiring a new social scene,” the article read, mentioning several other upscale bars.<ref> “The resurrection of Polk Street,Oakland Tribune, May 22, 2005.  </ref> 
  
The neighborhood association asked the bar to pay for private security and demanded that hustlers no longer be allowed in front of the building. The RendezVous refused, saying that it was only their responsibility to police the area in front of the building, not on either side. “We started coming back to the planning department saying these aren’t good neighbors,” Case said. “We [told them we] don’t want them to move. And the planning department turned ‘em down.”
 
  
“I think that the demise of the Polk Street gay scene was a natural progression,” said James Beales, a bartender at RendezVous. “I think business nowadays couldn’t support that many bars on the street…I was just upset that when we tried to hold the Club RondezVous as one last bastion of the gay history and culture on Polk Street…that we were stamped out like that at the end.
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The San Francisco Bay Times also noted, in 2005, a “trend …over the last few years as [Polk Street] Gay bars change hands, redecorate…then put in a bid for a new clientele; often straight, or predominantly ethnic or specifically higher toned—or in other words, hustler-free zones.<ref> “The Closing of a Bar…and the Rebirth of English Punk Rock,” San Francisco Bay Times, January 6, 2005. </ref> 
  
The First Congregational Church, attracted to the area by the low rents and designed by Case’s architecture firm, now sits on the ruins of the RondezVous, along with a number of high-end condominiums and a banking outlet. What were shuttered storefronts surrounding the area are now high-end salons and wine bars.
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One of the most controversial examples of this shift was the relocation of the RendezVous bar in 2005, after the bar lost its lease and a newly formed neighborhood association opposed their relocation to alternate location on Polk Street. The only open business on the street at that time, the association faulted them for the homeless and hustlers who gathered in front and the shuttered buildings in front of and on either side of the bar.
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In 2004, restaurant owner Myles O’Reilly also spent six million dollars to purchase and renovate a shuttered building on Polk Street across the street from the RendezVous bar. He says his financial investment led to the neighborhood association “decid[ing] to crank up the involvement of the merchants.”<ref> Interview with Myles O'Reilly by Joey Plaster, 2008. </ref>  They created a fund to hire private security and steam clean the alleyways, a favorite site for hustling and drug dealing.
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[[Image:Ron.jpg|thumb|Ron Case. Photo by Gabriela Hasbun.]]By 2005, the neighborhood association had secured a $90,000 grant for from the Department for Public Works “for beautification issues,” Ron Case, an association co-chair, said.
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“Then you’re walking along the street and it was that bad….There used to be young kids all up and down Polk Street, and [in front of RendezVous] was the last vestige of kids on the street that we saw.” “We started coming back to the planning department saying these aren’t good neighbors,” Case said. “We [told them we] don’t want them to move. And the planning department turned ‘em down.”<ref> Interview with Ron Case by Joey Plaster, 2008. </ref> 
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By 2006, the City instituted a “Polk Street Commercial Corridor Revitalization and Stabilization Community Action Plan” to plan for “regular sidewalk power-washing…increased police presence…in specific hotspot areas such as drugs and prostitution…[and work to] fill vacant storefronts.” In 2008, the First Congregational Church, attracted to the area by the low rents and designed by Case’s architecture firm, sits on the ruins of the RendezVous along with high-end condominiums and a banking outlet.  
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“I think that the demise of the Polk Street gay scene was a natural progression,” said James Beales, a bartender at RendezVous. “I think business nowadays couldn’t support that many bars on the street…I was just upset that when we tried to hold the Club RondezVous as one last bastion of the gay history and culture on Polk Street…that we were stamped out like that at the end.”<ref> Interview with James Beales by Joey Plaster, 2008. </ref>
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[[Category:Polk Street]]
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[[Category:20th century]]
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[[Category:Redevelopment]]
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<div style="text-align: right; direction: ltr; margin-left: 1em;">• Go to [[Vestiges_of_Economy:_Polk_Street_Homelessness| Next Article]]</div>

Latest revision as of 10:25, 8 May 2009

Text by Joey Plaster. Copyright (©) by C. Joey Plaster, 2009. All rights reserved.


Construction of the First Congregational Church, on the site of the former Q.T. and RendezVous bars. 2008.

The imagined queer, working-class utopia did not emerge. Undermining the gay male bar economy in particular were the skyrocketing commercial rents during the dot.com boom, the erosion of the cooperative bartender networks, an aging gay bar-going population, and the emergence of the Internet as both a social marketing tool and low-cost advertising method for commercialized sex. Reflecting these shifts, the Tavern Guild disbanded in 1995. Many of the Polk Street bar owners, who had purchased the property at the height of the gay bar economy in the 1970s, now retired and sold their bars as bar rents increased. Others, including Marvin Warren, passed away.


Mirroring the changes in the early 1960s, the faltering queer bars that formed the backbone of the Polk community became havens for young artists and “hipsters,” or upscale, heterosexual and mixed drinking establishments.


Bar owner Kimo Cochran made several changes to keep his bar “Kimos” profitable from 1977 to 2008. “First all I had to do was open the doors and the crowd was here every day,” he said. He organized drag shows after the onset of AIDS pummeled business, and in the 1990s hosted rock bands, drawing a young, primarily heterosexual crowd. “I’d say sometime 100% of the crowd is straight up there,” he said.[1]


Others bar owners reached a similar outcome by taking a more interventionist approach. In 2000, Steve Black bought out two gay bars across the street from Polk Street’s transgender club Divas – also the center of the city’s transgender prostitution district. He turned what he called magnets for “bottom-feeder gay men” into upscale bars, taking direct steps to change the clientele.


“With a vigilante spirit,” a 2006 article read, “he drove the transgender prostitutes out of the Lush Lounge [and] “chased drug dealers off the sidewalk,” leading to a hearing with the San Francisco Human Rights Commission. “His formula not only has worked to attract young barhoppers (most straight, some gay) but also is inspiring a new social scene,” the article read, mentioning several other upscale bars.[2]


The San Francisco Bay Times also noted, in 2005, a “trend …over the last few years as [Polk Street] Gay bars change hands, redecorate…then put in a bid for a new clientele; often straight, or predominantly ethnic or specifically higher toned—or in other words, hustler-free zones.”[3]


One of the most controversial examples of this shift was the relocation of the RendezVous bar in 2005, after the bar lost its lease and a newly formed neighborhood association opposed their relocation to alternate location on Polk Street. The only open business on the street at that time, the association faulted them for the homeless and hustlers who gathered in front and the shuttered buildings in front of and on either side of the bar.


In 2004, restaurant owner Myles O’Reilly also spent six million dollars to purchase and renovate a shuttered building on Polk Street across the street from the RendezVous bar. He says his financial investment led to the neighborhood association “decid[ing] to crank up the involvement of the merchants.”[4] They created a fund to hire private security and steam clean the alleyways, a favorite site for hustling and drug dealing.


Ron Case. Photo by Gabriela Hasbun.

By 2005, the neighborhood association had secured a $90,000 grant for from the Department for Public Works “for beautification issues,” Ron Case, an association co-chair, said.


“Then you’re walking along the street and it was that bad….There used to be young kids all up and down Polk Street, and [in front of RendezVous] was the last vestige of kids on the street that we saw.” “We started coming back to the planning department saying these aren’t good neighbors,” Case said. “We [told them we] don’t want them to move. And the planning department turned ‘em down.”[5]


By 2006, the City instituted a “Polk Street Commercial Corridor Revitalization and Stabilization Community Action Plan” to plan for “regular sidewalk power-washing…increased police presence…in specific hotspot areas such as drugs and prostitution…[and work to] fill vacant storefronts.” In 2008, the First Congregational Church, attracted to the area by the low rents and designed by Case’s architecture firm, sits on the ruins of the RendezVous along with high-end condominiums and a banking outlet.


“I think that the demise of the Polk Street gay scene was a natural progression,” said James Beales, a bartender at RendezVous. “I think business nowadays couldn’t support that many bars on the street…I was just upset that when we tried to hold the Club RondezVous as one last bastion of the gay history and culture on Polk Street…that we were stamped out like that at the end.”[6]


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  1. Interview with Kimo Cochran by Joey Plaster, 2008.
  2. “The resurrection of Polk Street,” Oakland Tribune, May 22, 2005.
  3. “The Closing of a Bar…and the Rebirth of English Punk Rock,” San Francisco Bay Times, January 6, 2005.
  4. Interview with Myles O'Reilly by Joey Plaster, 2008.
  5. Interview with Ron Case by Joey Plaster, 2008.
  6. Interview with James Beales by Joey Plaster, 2008.