“A great city is not to be confounded with a populous one.” — Aristotle

Pride FlagIn the March 27, 2007 issue, The Advocate named the Best Places for Gays and Lesbians to Live. Click over to read the article and get the skinny on these cities and some surprising small towns. The Top Ten Places are listed below in alphabetical order:

Columbus, Ohio; Dallas, Texas; Ferndale, Michigan; Ithaca, New York; Lexington, Kentucky; Missoula, Montana; Portland, Oregon; San Diego, California; Santa Fe, New Mexico; and Tucson, Arizona.

In the online version, you’ll find a Poll raising this question, “Do you prefer to live in an integrated neighborhood or a distinct gay ghetto?” Twice as many people seem to prefer the integrated neighborhood… which may explain why the places listed above appeal to queers.

I agree with the majority casting votes and personally prefer environs that aren’t defined by my sexual orientation. I like the convenience of suburbia with neighborhoods that have curbs, sidewalks and a tidy street right-of-way. That said… Jeanine and I are the only gay people on our block in Newport Beach. But that just makes us more interesting in my opinion. We get invited to all the barbecues and Super Bowl parties… probably more than we care to attend.

Perhaps times are changing along with the face of gay real estate. Lisa Leff of the New York Post writes, “For more than 30 years, most big cities have had a district either explicitly or implicitly understood to be the place to go if you were gay – the West Village and Chelsea in New York City, Washington’s Dupont Circle, Boston’s South End.”

“But as gays and lesbians win legal rights and greater social acceptance, community activists worry these so-called ‘gayborhoods’ are losing their relevance. Don Reuter, a New York writer who is researching a book on the rise and fall of a dozen gay neighborhoods in the U.S., has observed the same trend in cities as far-flung as New Orleans, Philadelphia and Seattle.” Is there really any reason to segregate these days?

In San Francisco, Wyatt Buchanan of the San Francisco Chronicle writes, “To walk down San Francisco’s Castro Street — where men casually embrace on sidewalks in the shadow of an enormous rainbow flag — the neighborhood’s status as “gay Mecca’ seems obvious.”

“But up and down the enclave that has been a symbol of gay culture for more than three decades, heterosexuals are moving in. They have come to enjoy some of the same amenities that have attracted the neighborhood’s many gay and lesbian residents: charming houses, convenient public transportation, safe streets and nice weather.”

The integration of gay and straight is increasingly evident not only in the Castro District but across North America, from Chicago to New York City to Toronto, where urban revitalization is bringing new residents at the same time some gays are settling in other parts of cities or the suburbs — such as the East Bay.”

Just down the road from me in Laguna Beach the same has happened on a smaller scale. Laguna’s gay identity has all but disappeared. One by one the gay bars have closed. Steve Lowery of the OC Weekly explains, “Steadily, gays have been leaving Laguna. High rents and real estate prices have chased out a lot of the younger crowd, which has fled to places like Palm Springs and Long Beach. Laguna got rid of its gay pride parade years ago. People who paid millions to purchase homes in quirky Laguna all of a sudden feel like they’d like a little less quirk.”

Okay, so the gay bars are gone and perhaps the twenty-something queers can’t afford the rent, but trust me, gay people still live in Laguna Beach. Maybe the point being is that gay people just aren’t considered quirky any more. Do we need our own bars and bookstores and community centers? Or is it okay to just be a neighbor without the gay neighborhood?

You tell me… Would you only buy a home in West Hollywood or is Silver Lake a better place? Is Midtown in Atlanta a must or could you survive outside the Perimeter? Is a Chicago condo in Lake View (Boystown) the place to live or are the suburbs calling you, your partner and kids to the village of Inverness? Where are you buying homes and choosing to live these days?