0:00 - Introduction; born in 1946 in Canton China; family and family history; describes Macau and the immigrant experience there; liked his uncles jewelry store so he became a jeweler in Dominican Republic; Chinese community in DR; came alone to Chinatown but had friends who came before; first arrival in Chinatown living in East Bowery; robbery made people scared; development starts in downtown, and Chinatown needs to develop but need engaged residents not tourists; Confucius Plaza’s importance to him
Direct segment link:
13:11 - What else was in Chinatown on Mott and Pearl; small community where people know each other has become more distant; young people visiting movie theatres on weekends; back then things felt more alive; second generation has spread out from the older generations; stronger sense of community and respect for elders back then; Music Palace Theatre history; small hotels and motels in the area changing
Direct segment link:
23:04 - People drawn to Chinatown because of the culture and friends and food; difficulty of working with the city and why people need to improve the area through a bid; he believes in renewal and improvement but it needs to be balanced with local interests; Canal street in the 1970s-80s; his jewelry store; people learned jewelry from him and opened stores after; hard to make money on slim profit margins, high competition, and high rent; knockoff handbag industry makes Chinatown look bad and cheap
Direct segment link:
32:31 - His customers are mixed between locals and outsiders; discuss the fake handbag sales and how it makes people think everything on Canal street is fake; been president of Canal Jewelry Association for fifteen years, very cooperative community; discusses other business communities
Direct segment link:
38:52 - He never gets tired of Chinatown and he wants to improve it; wants to stay in the area forever; lots of traffic on Canal which causes damage and pollution is his only issue; everyone has their own favorite spots; people want to understand Chinese culture and he likes to educate younger generations; favorite cake spot
Direct segment link:
47:09 - The borders of Chinatown; biggest changes in Chinatown; wants to see young Chinese professionals return to Chinatown; Indian immigrants move into buildings as a group in Brooklyn which is different from Chinese immigrants; his thoughts on the condos popping up in the area; dynamic with landlords; as long as there are Chinese people invested in Chinatown, they won’t get broken apart; people are willing to rent at lower rates to local Chinese instead of outsiders
Direct segment link:
57:42 - Chinatown is different from most of New York because real estate prices don’t fluctuate as much when things get bad because people don’t want to leave the community; Little Italy has become more Chinese; one building changing and becoming gentrified doesn’t change the whole area; people across Manhattan are getting priced out not just Chinatown; people aren’t invested in the community in other parts of the city in the same way as in Chinatown; tenants have more rights in the US than China
Direct segment link:
65:44 - CPLEC; issues of cleanliness in the Chinatown community which LMDC and the City are trying to combat; marketing Chinatown to tourists to get more business; need to partner with the government and make a BID to push improvement; some people don’t want to accept the tax increase associated with the BID; discusses impact of BID on residential vs. commercial; wants to protect the residential
Direct segment link:
75:31 - First impression and job in NYC Chinatown; very different from Macau; nowadays people feel less connected to the space in his opinion; why he moved to Queens but kept his business in Chinatown; most important thing is to keep the old buildings and bring back young people; family and children; kids don’t want to live in Chinatown; importance of learning to cook instead of eating out all the time; need the younger generation
Direct segment link: