Go to main content
Formats
Format
BibTeX
MARCXML
TextMARC
MARC
DataCite
DublinCore
EndNote
NLM
RefWorks
RIS

Files

Abstract

This paper investigates the typological characteristics of corner stores in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood, from the mid-20th century to the present. Corner stores are defined as small, locally owned commercial spaces, typically open late, offering a wide range of merchandise, following a recognizable typology, and interspersed throughout neighborhoods, collectively forming an adaptable and resilient social infrastructure. I argue that Bronzeville’s corner stores from the mid-century and the present share physical, geographic, social, and programmatic typologies that arise out of the peculiarities of the neighborhood’s commercial environment and broader infrastructural trends. This study will trace the role of these typologies in defining a neighborhood’s commercial culture and transformations in these typologies alongside larger-scale developments in the neighborhood’s built environment. This analysis allows us to understand their form in the contemporary city and their changing relationship with the neighborhoods where they operate. Incorporating evidence from Timuel Black’s collection of oral histories, Bridges of Memory, and observations collected from site visits, this study demonstrates how Bronzeville’s corner stores were priced and placed out of dense, residential sections of Bronzeville to existing commercial strips, which often contained single-use, low-density buildings. Despite this marginalization, this study shows how Bronzeville’s historic corner store typologies—which were crucial in fostering neighborhood intimacy, racial solidarity, and pathways for social mobility—have been translated into the forms of the contemporary city. Ultimately, this analysis emphasizes the importance of corner stores for maintaining vibrant, culturally rich urban neighborhoods and calls attention to the consequences of their loss.

Details

PDF

from
to
Export
Download Full History