Since Accra became a tourist city in 2019, plastered everywhere are billboards advertising luxury residential developments, all talking about luxury living and real estate investment opportunities. And hidden in plain sight are the dollar signs attached to these developments, quietly sending a message. This is not housing meant for the average resident. It is aimed at foreign investors and so-called diasporas (lifestyle/return migrants) with dollars, looking for a "safe" place to park their money. Accra is going through a phase, a phase characterized by a shift from middle-income housing to high-end luxury housing and, now, short-term rental development. Accra is a city with three faces. One viewed by the elite and foreign investor, another by the middle-class in the city, and the third by the working class. Now the second and third faces merge into one. This image embodies the different phases and faces: in the background sit three residential buildings marking the pre-tourism era, the onset of tourism, and an emerging development. In the foreground, the street divides two urban realities: on the left, Accra tailored to transnational consumption; on the right, a working-class landscape rendered peripheral, embodied by a street hawker and an informal tire repair center.