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In the spring of 2007, the Chicago Housing Authority demolished the last of the 28 buildings in the Robert Taylor Homes housing project. Robert Taylor Homes is one of several high profile housing project demolitions, from St. Louis’s Pruitt-Igoe to fellow Chicago project Cabrini Green. The demolitions serve as an admission that high-rise public housing wasn’t a good idea. The housing that replaced them are all low rise projects better integrated within existing neighborhoods. So why did anyone back then think it was a good idea? Why did housing authorities build these high rise projects in the first place?
Resources on this topic:
Hunt, D. B. (2001). What Went Wrong with Public Housing in Chicago? A History of the Robert Taylor Homes. Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 94(1), 96–123.
"Demolished: The End of Chicago's Public Housing" by David Eads and Helga Salinas. [ Ссылка ]
"When Public Housing Was Paradise" by Joy Connelly [ Ссылка ]
"Elizabeth Wood, 93, Innovator In Early Days of Public Housing" by Bruce Lambert [ Ссылка ]
"A Brief History of Public Housing" by Jennifer Amy Stoloff [ Ссылка ]
Video sources:
- Archive.org, Prelinger Archives
Photo sources:
- Wikimedia Commons
- Flickr user Samuel A. Love
- Zahiri, N., Dezhdar, O., & Foroutan, M. (2016). Rethinking of Critical Regionalism in High-Rise Buildings. Buildings, 7(1), 4. [ Ссылка ]
Filmed in sunny Sacramento, California.
Why did we build high-rise public housing projects?
Теги
city planningtown planningurban planningurban designpublic housinghousing projectsthe projectsslumschicagorobert taylor homescabrini greenpruitt-igoest louischicago public housingchicago ghettosdetroithousinghigh-rise public housingmodernismle corbusierelizabeth woodcatherine bauerurban renewalnegro removalhousing act of 1937housing policyhousing authoritychicago housing authority