arch416publichousingi
TRANSCRIPT
ARCH 416
Spring '15
Public Housing I
agenda 3.20.15
first federal housing policy during the Depression
attempting to provide housing for the millions evicted
attempting to articulate housing as a basic right
USHA 1937: mechanism for funding public housing
Brewster-Douglass, Detroit, MI
Pruitt-Igoe, St. Louis, MO
Cabrini-Green, Chicago, IL
The Great Depression
October 29, 1929: "Black Tuesday" stock market crash.
Shortages in money supply and credit. Many bankruptcies
and shrinking businesses. Workers laid off; 25%
unemployment by 1932.
No jobs.
No money for food. No money for rent or mortgage
payments. No money for clothing.
President Herbert Hoover thought it would blow over.
The breadline was a common sight.
Margaret BOURKE-WHITE, Breadline during the Louisville Flood, 1937
Great Depression—impact
on housing
Between 1928 and 1933:
• residential construction activity plummeted by 95%.
• one million households foreclosed upon.
By Spring 1933:
• 50% of all home mortgages were in default.
• rate of 1000 foreclosures/day.
Hoover's response, 1932
was probably insufficient.
Federal Home Loan Bank Act (assisted banks with
mortgage lending by creating a credit reserve).
Emergency Relief and Construction Act (loans to
nonprofits building low-income housing).
"Hooverville," Sacramento, CA
The distinctive architecture of President Hoover's administration: the shanty.
"Hooverville," Seattle, WA, 1931-1941, near port
"Hooverville," St. Louis, MO, on Mississippi River
"Hooverville,"
Elm Grove, OK
1936
"Hooverville," Central Park, NY, 1932
location of
Chicago's
Hooverville,
Grant Park at
Randolph St.
1933
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (we usually call him "FDR") was
elected. Put forward a wide range of policies and programs
to create a "social safety net".
"New Deal": sea change in reach of federal government
1. Asked Congress to repeal Prohibition.
2. TVA: public project to build hydroelectric dams in one of
the poorest regions of the country.
3. Agricultural Adjustment Act. Paid farmers NOT to plant to
end agricultural surpluses that were depressing crop prices.
origins of: unemployment insurance, public housing, public
New Deal, continued
4. National Industrial Recovery. Guaranteed the right to
unionize and bargain collectively for higher wages and better
working conditions. Suspended some antitrust laws (in other
words, allowed some monopolies) and established PUBLIC
WORKS ADMINISTRATION (government-funded
infrastructure projects.)
5. Glass-Steagall Banking Bill (commercial banking
separated from investment banking.)
6. Home Owners' Loan Act.
first 100 days
THE PUBLIC WORKS ADMINISTRATION (PWA) focused on large-scale
construction projects, including bridges and dams. In 1934, work began on the
Grand Coulee and Boneville Dams along the Columbia River.
Hoover Dam (originally Boulder Dam) was built at the height of the Great Depression,
employing a total of 21,000 men during its five years of construction.
Created by Franklin Roosevelt in 1933, the Civilian Conservation Corps put
more than 3 million young men to work during the Great Depression.
CCC
Established in 1933, the CCC was initially open to
unmarried, unemployed men between the ages of 18 and
25.
Participants had to send $22 to $25 of their $30 monthly
allowance back to their families.
CCC volunteers were divided into companies typically
numbering 150 to 200 men.
CCC in Illinois
soil erosion control projects on farmland
construction of lodges and trails at Pere Marquette, Giant
City, and Starved Rock
tree planting
Camp Eureka, located east of the Mackinaw River on the
north side of what is now U.S. 150, served northwestern
McLean County and parts of Woodford and Tazewell
counties.
Many Camp Eureka volunteers gained 10 to 15 pounds
during the first two months of camp life, testament to the
widespread malnutrition and hunger average Americans
faced during the Great Depression.
CCC volunteers at Camp Leroy in Illinois working
on control measures for soil erosion.
CCC project in Illinois during the Great Depression.
1935 Second New Deal
WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION (WPA)
• provided jobs, built post offices, schools, and
infrastructure like bridges, highways and parks.
• also employed artists, writers, directors, and musicians
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS ACT to set terms by which
unions and employers would interact.
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
• created pensions for old age
• system of unemployment insurance
• care of dependent children and the disabled
The Works Progress
Administration spent more
than $4 billion dollars on
highway, road and street
projects.
New York City's Triborough Bridge was one of the biggest WPA projects.
WPA workers on the job.
1936
Despite aggressive investment in jobs programs, the
Depression continued.
Severe labor unrest.
December 1936: the United Auto Workers started a sit-down
strike at a GM plant in Flint, Michigan that lasted for 44 days
and was joined by 150,000 autoworkers in 35 cities. By 1937,
8 million workers had unionized.
when/how does it end?
We enter World War II against Japan and Germany after the
bombing of Pearl Harbor, end of 1941.
The war machine cranks up. Full employment.
internal company morale poster,
Westinghouse Corp.
J. Howard Miller
1943
list of New Deal policies
• http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/Courses/101_USH/ne
w_deal.htm
HOLC (1933)
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPORATION (HOLC).
A government-sponsored corporation established in 1933 to
refinance home mortgages that were in default (preventing
foreclosure).
FHA (1934)
FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION (FHA)
The FHA was created in 1934 to stimulate the building
industry. How?
• insuring mortgage loans made by banks—increasing
number of loans with better terms
• smaller down payments, longer repayment periods
• minimum standards for housing construction
“There are far-reaching problems still with us for which
democracy must find solutions if it is to consider itself
successful. For example, many millions of Americans still live
in habitations which not only fail to provide the physical
benefits of modern civilization but breed disease and impair
the health of future generations. The menace exists not only
in the slum areas of the very large cities, but in many smaller
cities as well. It exists on tens of thousands of farms, in
varying degrees, in every part of the country.”
—FDR, State of the Union Message
January 6, 1937
"I see one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-
clad, ill-nourished. . . . The test of our
progress is not whether we add more to
the abundance of those who have much;
it is whether we provide enough for those
who have too little.”
—FDR, Second Inaugural Address, January 20, 1937
"Springwood," FDR's home in Hyde Park, NY, built 1800; 1845; 1866; 1915
USHA (1937)
UNITED STATES HOUSING AUTHORITY (USHA) provided
$500 million in loans for low-cost housing projects across the
country. How?
USHA was the loan- granting agency to state and local
housing authorities to build low-cost housing in both small
and large urban areas.
Loans could be as much as 90% of project costs, at low-
interest and on 60-year terms.
USHA gets started
By the end of 1940, over 500 USHA projects were in
progress or had been completed, with loan contracts of $691
million.
Program was supposed to be self-sustaining through the
collection of rents: 50% rent from the tenants themselves,
33.33% paid by Federal government; and 16.66% paid by
the localities themselves.
During World War II, the USHA was instrumental in planning
and constructing housing for defense workers.
FDR
"Second Bill of Rights"
State of the Union
January 11, 1944
FDR
"Second Bill of Rights"
State of the Union
January 11, 1944
the role of race
The Great Migration
characteristics of Northern racism vs Southern racism
Great Migration
When the Emancipation Proclamation was signed
(January 1, 1863) fewer than 8% of US African-American
population lived in the Northeast or Midwest.
By 1900, 90% of all African- Americans still resided in the
South.
Western Migration, 1879-1881, about 60,000 African-
Americans moved into Kansas and Oklahoma Indian
Territories in search of social and economic freedom.
African-American population density, by county, based upon 1900 census data
US Census Bureau, Data Visualization Gallery,
https://www.census.gov/dataviz/visualizations/020/
Great Migration
steady stream with massive waves around WWI and WWII
when high-paying jobs were plentiful
PHASE I: 1910-1940
PHASE II: 1940-1970
hope of freedom
"The North symbolized to me all that I had not felt or seen; it
had no relation to what actually existed. Yet by imagining a
place where everything is possible, it kept hope alive inside
of me."
—Richard Wright
race, 2010
http://demographics.coopercenter.org/DotMap/index.html
complete map
http://www.wired.com/2013/08/how-segregated-is-your-city-
this-eye-opening-map-shows-you/
map presented with commentary & city jpegs
DETROIT
Protest signs outside the Sojourner Truth Housing Project, 1942
Brewster-Douglass, Detroit
Project developed in phases, beginning with low-rise
apartment rows, ending with high-rise towers.
Existing neighborhood cleared: Black Bottom—the
commercial strip was known as Paradise Valley.
Current residents objected, but did not have a voice in the
decision.
Segregated housing project for African-Americans.
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt attended the "clearing"
ceremony.
Brewster Project
Design by Harley, Ellington & Day of Detroit. =
Low-rise apartment blocks, begun in 1935, was completed
in 1938.
Expansion, completed in 1941, brought the total number
of housing units to 941.
Brewster Homes, 1939
Frederick Douglass
Apartments
The Frederick Douglass Apartments, built immediately to the
south of the Brewster Project, began construction in 1942
with the completion of apartment rows, two 6-story low-rises,
and finally six 14-story high rises completed between 1952
and 1955.
The combined Brewster-Douglass Project was five city
blocks long, and three city blocks wide, and housed
anywhere between 8,000 and 10,000 residents.
Douglass Towers, last remaining 4 towers, 2010 (now demolished)
qualifications for residency
Detroit Housing Commission initially required one parent
for each family to be employed.
Brewster Homes
1991 the original Brewster Project was demolished,
1994 250 new townhomes renamed the "Brewster Homes."
ST. LOUIS
Pruitt-Igoe
1952 city began clearing the old DeSoto-Carr
neighborhood.
57-acre complex of 33 11-storey buildings.
2,868 apartments for low-income people.
Mayor Joseph M. Darst said, "These two projects are
tangible evidence of progress in the continuing war
against slums and decay."
An aerial view of the Pruitt and Igoe housing complexes under construction
northwest of downtown, August 1954.
sketch for "open gallery concept"
One of the first
families to move
into Pruitt
October 1954
Igoe Homes in July 1955, 10 buildings with
apartments for 1,132 families.
Tenant in her living room in Igoe, 1967.
using the stove for heat,
January 1970
January 1970
severe weather caused pipes to freeze,
then burst, damaging electrical systems
and heat
Demolition of Pruitt-Igoe, April 1972
Children walk by piles of rubble on Oct. 5, 1972. Why is the debris still there?
"The Pruitt-Igoe Myth"
(2011)
dir. Chad Freidrichshttps://vimeo.com/39276340
Site tour
https://vimeo.com/18356414
Trailer for documentary
CHICAGO
2501 West Lake,
Henry Horner
Homes, Chicago,
1995Photographed by Camilo Vergara
View east along
West Lake from
Oakley, Chicago,
1998Photograph by Camilo Vergara
Timeline: Early Years1929 - Harvey Zorbaugh writes "The Gold Coast and the Slum: A Sociological Study of Chicago's Near North Side," contrasting wealthy Gold Coast, with poor Little Sicily (“Little Hell”)
Marshall Field Garden Apartments, first large-scale (although funded through private charity) low-income housing development in area, completed.
1942 - Frances Cabrini Homes (two-story rowhouses), with 586 units in 54 buildings, completed. Initial regulations stipulate 75% white and 25% black residents. Holsman, Burmeister, et al, architects.
1958 - Cabrini Homes Extension (red brick mid- and high-rises), with 1,925 units in 15 buildings, is completed. A. Epstein & Sons, architects.
1962 - Green Homes (1,096 units, north of Division Street) is completed. Pace Associates, architects.
“Chicago Can Build,” 1950 report by Chicago Housing Authority
Alamer Lee Vassar
“I came to Chicago in 1942. I moved into a building at 1230
North Larrabee on October 2nd of that year. There wasn’t no
projects here then and my husband was in the service.
That’s what brought us up here from Mississippi. I got a job
and went to work. Back then they would beg you when you
walked out the door, sayin,’Do you wanna work for me, do
you wanna work for me?’
“It was beautiful down here. They used to have this festival
and parade in the summer, and they had these lights that run
from Chicago [Avenue] all the way up to North, and we used
to sit out in front of 1230 and look at the people drivin’ by and
parkin’ their cars—whites and colored people at that time—
and everything was lovely, I mean, beautiful. And the kids
they’d go around the corner,
Paulette Simpson
“My mother was the second person to move into 502. The
elevator excited me and everything was perfect. If you had a
problem with anything in your house, CHA was out there
within 24 hours or less. They were on top of everything then.
I went to Jenner school. I played out in the playground. I
went to Lower North Center to take dancing classes, and I
used to go to Stanton Park for swimming.”
Wanda Hopkins
“We moved here September 1, 1960. We were the second ones in the building at 534 W. Division.
When I moved in it was just so beautiful, the buildings wasn’t grayish the way it is now but really the white color, and the apartments were so new, and the floors were shining…I was about four or five…
It was so new and so pretty and the grass was green….My mother says you’re really crazy to remember all that, but I look at it now after all these years and I can just remind myself of how it was and I can tell people that this was not the original plan. But I remember other families moving in, and these were all white families, and someone organized the Cub Scouts and the Brownie Scot because I remember I became a Brownie…I remember the Brownie uniform and all that, my brothers were in the Cub Scouts.”
Wanda Hopkins
“Yeah, and we used to live right next door to a white family,
I’ll never forget, we’d spend the night at each other’s house,
stuff that you’d never think of would happen back then. I
remember Alice and Sally. I lived in 402, they lived in 403. My
mother never felt that anything would happen to me when we
spent the night at each other’s house, and her mother never
felt that….It’s almost unheard of now. But I keep tellin’ people
the way it is now was the original plan, and I just wanted
them to know that. I guess that’s why I kept it all in my
memory.”
(p. 53)
Cabrini Extension (1958) and William Green Homes
(1962). The original population of Cabrini-Green reflected
the area's prior ethnic mix; poor Italians, Irish, Puerto
Ricans, and African Americans lived among the war
workers and veterans. Racial segregation overtook
Cabrini-Green by the early 1960s.
1966 - Gautreaux et al vs. Chicago Housing Authority, a lawsuit alleging that Chicago's public housing program was conceived and executed in a racially discriminatory manner that perpetuated racial segregation within neighborhoods, is filed. CHA was found guilty in 1969, and a consent decree was issued in 1981.
July 17, 1970 - Sergeant James Severin and Officer Tony Rizzato of the Chicago Police Department are fatally shot.
1981 - Mayor Jane Byrne moves into Cabrini-Green as part of a publicity stunt.
October 13, 1992 - Seven-year-old Dantrell Davis is fatally shot while walking to school with his mother. Some of the shots came from 500-502 W. Oak Street.
Old Town Village West townhomes, a new mixed-income development, in the
background is the William Green Homes high-rise, part of Cabrini-Green, later
demolished. [Photo: Lawrence J. Vale]
North Town Village mixed-income housing, on the left, with the last of the
Cabrini-Green high-rises on the right; the high-rise was demolished in 2011.
[Photo: Lawrence J. Vale]
the new improved Near North side
The new Cabrini Target,
opened in 2013.
1994 - Chicago receives one of the first HOPE VI (Housing Opportunities for People Everywhere) grants to redevelop Cabrini-Green as a mixed-income neighborhood.
September 27, 1995 - Demolition begins.
1997 - Chicago unveils Near North Redevelopment Initiative, a master plan for development in the area. It recommends demolishing Green Homes and most of Cabrini Extension.
1999 - Chicago Housing Authority announces Plan for Transformation, which will spend $1.5 billion over ten years to demolish 18,000 apartments and build or rehabilitate 25,000 apartments. Earlier redevelopment plans for Cabrini-Green are included in the Plan for Transformation. New library, rehabilitated Seward Park, and new shopping center open.