Will Payne Maps NYC’s “Gourmet Gentrification” Trends

June 17, 2025

Mapping elite tastes along New York City’s gourmet gentrification frontier, 1990–2015

Abstract

Urban researchers have long considered the spread of upscale amenities like restaurants, cafes and bars to be important symbolic indicators of gentrification, and recent scholarship has shown that increases in upscale consumption amenities are positively associated with rising rents and demographic changes. This article builds on research in urban and economic geography to consider the role of changing informational networks about consumption businesses. Using a novel dataset assembled from print Zagat Survey guidebooks, the first crowdsourced restaurant guide and the direct antecedent of contemporary local review platforms like Yelp and Google Maps, this article traces the contours of ‘gourmet gentrification’ in New York City using quantitative and spatial analysis from 1990 to 2015. The visibility and desirability of specific restaurants and neighbourhoods has changed significantly over several decades for Zagat’s largely affluent professional audience of surveyor-readers. Neighbourhoods in northern Brooklyn in particular saw precipitous increases in listing density over this time period. In addition to mapping these spatial trends, the article compares the Survey’s recorded meal prices to household income data from the Census, showing the shifting affordability of Zagat-listed restaurants to area residents at the Neighbourhood Tabulation Area (NTA) level over time. In the New York City case, gourmet restaurants are a leading, not lagging, indicator of demographic change. Zagat listings on the edge of the ‘gourmet gentrification frontier’ tend to initially be unaffordable to area residents, but over time this trend is muted as the residential population of these areas becomes wealthier and the frontier moves outward.

Citation

Payne, W. B. (2025). Mapping elite tastes along New York City’s gourmet gentrification frontier, 1990–2015. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/0308518X251342927

Recent Posts

Rubin and Flores-Serrano Receive NJASPA Awards

he New Jersey Chapter of the American Society for Public Administration (NJ ASPA) honored ten distinguished public servants and eight outstanding graduate students at its 2026 Annual Awards Reception on Wednesday evening at Saint Peter’s University’s MacMahon Student...

Singer (DHA ’27) and Prof. Bhuyan Address Physician Burnout

N.J.’s physician burnout crisis is pushing doctors to leave | Opinion nj.com, May 17, 2026 Somewhere in New Jersey tonight, a primary care doctor is sitting at her kitchen table, still in her work clothes, clicking through an electronic records system to document...

Jagannathan Receives Fulbright to Expand Nurture Thru Nature in India

The Fulbright Program has selected Professor Radha Jagannathan as a 2026–2027 Fulbright U.S. Scholar for India, recognizing her work in education, public policy, and community-based research. The prestigious fellowship will support Jagannathan’s collaboration with...