‘Lego structures’
Colloquially, people have referred to 5-over-1s as “gentrification buildings” or “
fast-casual architecture.” Not all of them are built the same, however. Some are permanent affordable housing communities, while others hawk luxury urban living. Still, for many people, 5-over-1s have come to symbolize, in tangible form, the most painful aspects of today’s housing crisis — stand-ins for gentrification, corporate landlords and excessively high rents.
That’s in part why they’re so hated, and why it’s acceptable to hate them.
“I think they’re terrible,” said Zereseni Selemun, 50, a Lyft driver, as he was passing through the Ballard neighborhood of Seattle. “It’s very ugly. Very ugly. I hate it!”
In 2015, Brad Evans, an artist, created the private Facebook group “
Denver FUGLY” to express his frustration over the city’s new uninspired development.
The group now has nearly 10,000 members and does not mince words: “Let’s get after it at the core of what needs to be exposed and work to stop the stupid, the lazy and the pathetic execution of bad ideas,” the page summary reads.