ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月22日 07時51分


The migration from New York City to Philadelphia, fueled by a quest for cheaper living, has long existed. But there’s another kind of New York transplant heading there. “The houses in Chinatown are too small and little and old,” said Kin Yeung, describing how 8 people live in her old 2-bedroom apartment in Manhattan. “New York City right now — they cannot afford the rent. Too expensive. No one can live there.” And it’s not just the housing. Back in New York, a bag of bok choy cost as much as 89 cents. “And here I get it for 39 cents!” Mrs. Yeung said. Perhaps the best perk: In the yard of her home in Philadelphia, she has space for a vegetable garden. She’s part of a quiet wave of immigrants who stop for a few months or several years in New York before finding a more manageable city an hour and 45 minutes down the New Jersey Turnpike. The number of residents born abroad has increased 69% in Philadelphia since 2000. Many arrived via New York. Here, @michellegustafson photographed the CoCo Happy Dance Group dancing in Northeast Philadelphia. Visit the link in our profile to read about the quiet wave of immigrants who stop in NYC for a while before chasing the American Dream in #Philadelphia.


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