Pubdate: Sun, 28 Sep 2014 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 2014 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409 Author: Danny Westneat Page: B1 POT SHOP SHOWS SHIFT ON SEATTLE STREETS There may be no corner in Seattle with an image problem quite like the Central Area's 23rd and Union. "We've had property appraisers come from Bellevue and be afraid to get out of their cars," says Tom Bangasser, whose family has owned part of the corner for 73 years. It's always been a bad rap, he says. Especially recently, as street crime around the long-troubled corner has plummeted. But when a restaurant there was torched in an arson last year - after two previous owners of restaurants at the same location were murdered - it seemed to clinch that the corner is vexed by a terrible misfortune it just can't shake. Now there's a new force on the corner: legal pot. A marijuana store is opening there - Uncle Ike's Pot Shop. Next door, in the drive-through that burned last year, will be Uncle Ike's Glass and Goods, where you can buy pipes, rolling papers and bongs. One skeptical neighbor wrote to me: "Just what the corner needs to get going again, right?" I don't know; a pot store doesn't seem that different from a liquor store. But it will be fascinating to see what happens. Can selling a newly legalized drug help revitalize a corner that has been plagued by the illegal selling of drugs? Or will it further the trouble? Some neighbors are worried the pot shop will attract blackmarket pot dealers looking to lure customers with lower prices. But some Central Area residents and business owners I spoke to said legal pot with its high taxes is such an expensive luxury item that they are more worried about the shop having a different influence: gentrification. "I don't think you're going to see much of the old CD going in there," said Saviour Knowledge, who works with the Bangassers maintaining their corner property. "It'll be the white folks lining up." "I don't expect it to bring some crime wave," said Earl Lancaster, who runs the famed Earl's Cuts and Styles and is known as the "mayor of 23rd and Union." "It's a little close to the church though. So close we thought they were going to call it 'Holy Smokes.' " There's another potential pot store licensed nearby, on 24th Avenue. Because the corner is one of the only places in central Seattle where pot stores are allowed, it's being called "Little Amsterdam." "This corner's had it hard for so long, you could say that any business opening up is a positive," Knowledge said. "But I'm not sure Little Amsterdam is the answer." Knowledge is helping the Union Street Business Association, a coalition of businesses and residents trying to retain some black-owned enterprise in the neighborhood. The corner is about to see a development boom, with a six-story, 92-unit apartment building already going up and more on the way. "If you're not planning for gentrification in Seattle, then you're probably going to be a victim of it," Knowledge said. Is Little Amsterdam an image upgrade? "Ask me in a month or two," Bangasser said. "We don't know what it's going to be like. It's completely new; there's nothing to compare it to." Seattle's corners reveal how its culture is changing. Nearby is another one, at Martin Luther King and Cherry Street, that all by itself tells a sweeping history of central Seattle. Fifty years ago that corner was the Jewish hub of the city, anchored by the old Brenner Brothers Bakery. After the white flight to the suburbs, it was African-American, home to the beloved Creole fish joint Catfish Corner. The place was such a fixture the intersection itself came to be known as Catfish Corner. Last month, after 29 years, Catfish Corner closed. The intersection has come to be dominated by six restaurants and groceries owned by some of the city's newer black residents, Ethiopians. Messeret Habeti, owner of Assimba Restaurant on Cherry Street, says the change has been as complete as it is bittersweet. "It's so sad Catfish Corner is gone; it won't be the same," she said, tearing up. "They are calling this corner now 'Little Ethiopia.' " Little Amsterdam. Little Ethiopia. Even Seattle's names for itself are in flux. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom