Imagine a city where more than half its population has left within the past forty years. The people who remain cannot afford the upkeep of their houses, nor do they even wish to keep them at all. If a family still lingers in the city, they will dump their home at the first chance. A house, for example, in the middle of what had been a thriving part of the city, was dumped for $12,000--more than $50,000 less than assessed value, which was already tens of thousands less than what it should have been. The house was snapped up by professional landlords and stuffed with tenants, including a family of ten in an illegal apartment in the attic. The attic burned. The house emptied. Although it was salvageable, who wanted to invest in a partly burned home on a street where anyone could easily purchase crack? Windows were broken and the house was pillaged of materials. Eventually, the grand, 3,500 square foot house, built in the 1800s, was torn down. A weedy lot remains.
Now, put a natural wonder nearby. So nearby that in the quiet of the night, from that weedy lot, you can hear the thundering waters of nature, cascading over a mighty cataract. Welcome to Niagara Falls, New York.
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