Olivia Kozlowski can go block by block in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, telling stories of displacement.

The 38-year-old fashion stylist has lived all her life in the neighborhood, watching — and lamenting — its transformation from a Polish enclave in an old industrial zone to one of Brooklyn’s poshest destinations.

There are the glimmering new high-rise residential towers that replaced warehouse spaces along the East River, but also the pre-war apartment buildings and row houses farther inland, where rising rents have pushed out beloved neighbors.

Now, Kozlowski worries about her ability to stay in the neighborhood where she grew up. StreetEasy recently advertised a one-bedroom apartment in a building next to hers for close to $5,000 a month, roughly double the $2,600 she pays. Her place is no

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