The Time the Federal Government Built a Flawed Housing Project and Tore It Down 20 Years Later
The government has learned nothing about affordable housing in the 50 years since Pruitt-Igoe came toppling down.

On the 50th anniversary of the demolition of the Pruitt-Igoe, it's nearly impossible to understate the failure of the St. Louis public housing project.
Famed architect Minoro Yamasaki, who would go on to design the World Trade Center, received praise for his vision of the 57-acre property where Pruitt-Igoe once stood, even though his original plans didn't exactly come to fruition. The property had significant structural and design problems (including "skip-stop" elevators that encouraged stairwell crime by only stopping on select floors) and it's widely accepted that the housing project only exacerbated the ills of poverty and substandard housing.
Pruitt-Igoe represented complete racial and economic segregation. The building was dominated by single mother households that symbolized the collateral damage of public assistance. This was described by sociologist Lee Rainwater, in his book Behind Ghetto Walls: Life in a Federally-Subsidized Slum, "Only those Negroes who are desperate for housing are willing to live in Pruitt-Igoe." When imploded, the buildings weren't even two decades old.
The problems that toppled Pruitt-Igoe do not go nearly far enough to capture the deeply mistaken assumptions about government housing policy whose bad ideas continue today.
After clearing seedy areas, housing reformers who pushed for Pruitt-Igoe assumed that the neighborhoods they replaced were irredeemably bad and required what Architectural Forum magazine called, in 1957, "slum surgery." In reality, the DeSoto-Carr neighborhood—like Chicago's Bronzeville, Detroit's Black Bottom, and New York's East Harlem—contained small businesses, community institutions (such as a St. Louis hospital financed by African-American philanthropy) manufacturing, and, most notably, owner-occupied homes. Of the housing units cleared, according to the Census Bureau, 21 percent of the properties had "nonwhite owners." What's more, an additional 25 percent of those included rental units. It offered, in other words, a path to wealth accumulation through property ownership—a path wiped out by public housing.
Implicit in that heedless clearance was the idea that the private market inevitably fails to produce housing for those of modest means. In her landmark 1934 book Modern Housing, housing reformer, Catherine Bauer, wrote "The premises underlying the most successful forward-pointing housing developments are not the premises of capitalism [or] inviolate private property." It was no coincidence that Bauer also included photographs of government-owned apartments in Soviet Moscow.
The design of Pruitt-Igoe's modernist garden of towers would, instead, reflect the reformer's hubris that planners, financed by government, could build a better neighborhood. Yamasaki was operating out of the Le Corbusier playbook, one in which that French modernist envisioned a new kind of city—built around a campus instead of streets. It was one which, in other words, jettisoned the dynamism of true cities and their dispersed ownership. As Jane Jacobs put it in Death and Life of Great American Cities, there was room for "nobody's plans but the planners." Le Corbusier was blunt: "The plan must rule." It is no understatement to view this as a form of totalitarianism.
Pruitt-Igoe may be gone, but its lessons remain unlearned. Federal housing policy continues to support ill-founded utopian ideas. If Pruitt-Igoe was a failed "concentration of poverty," then surely subsidized "mixed-income" rental projects are the antidote that will uplift the poor. If public housing has suffered from a profound physical disrepair, the right mix of subsidies and "incentives" can lure private monies to renovate. The housing-industrial complex has come to include state housing finance authorities across the country, a federal housing voucher program larger than cash welfare, and a quasi-private sector of non-profit developers reliant on Washington champions convinced government allocation of capital is the best way to produce this generation's "affordable units."
But the government proved with Pruitt-Igoe and hundreds of similar projects across the country that it cannot build the social fabric that defines communities. Instead, it subsidizes anti-neighborhoods. And even Pruitt-Igoe still has its defenders, in the 2012 documentary film The Pruitt-Igoe Myth, University of Michigan historian Robert Fishman observes, "We don't want people to think of Pruitt-Igoe as a failure if they're going to then translate that failure to all public housing or all government programs or all social welfare or all modernism. That's what Pruitt-Igoe has been freighted with."
The right lesson to take from Pruitt-Igoe's spectacular implosion is that the government should get out of the housing business.
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The problem is the residents not the housing. The build it then rip it down syndrome is not unique to the example you provide.
Around here the new technique is section 8 houses. If you live in a middle class neighborhood some owner will section 8 their house and in moves housing project transplant.
9 times out of 10 the house turns into a sh$thole but the owner is Ok because rent is good and is guaranteed. Then other owners catch the drift and the whole neighborhood turns into a section 8 sh$thole same as the projects.
Tear down repeat. The problem is the residents.
See Indian housing. My mother worked briefly for the tribe cleaning tribal housing after residents moved out. These were fairly new construction at the time, well built, better than what we lived in. She was abhorred at the condition most of the units were in. Garbage strewn everywhere, utilities destroyed, holes in the wall etc. She couldn't take it and quit soon after starting. They couldn't keep crews. It was a real eye opener. They, the residents, had no financial motive to keep the house up, and once it became unlivable, just moved to another unit.
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie built a bunch of environmentally friendly housing on the reservation in my county about a decade ago, when they were still a couple. None are now considered habitable.
Ditto for a small reservation near where I grew up. I did some building work there. Good quality housing, not huge, but decent. But with a few exceptions it looked like stereotyped public housing.
Fortunately the casino turned the place around. A lot of people hate the casinos, but it's better than the squalor of government assistance. If you hate casinos at least get rid of the reservation system.
It really depends on how the casino is run. A lot of tribes get involved with the Vegas casino companies for start up costs and then end up in hoc to them. Others are smarter about it. Overall, I think casinos are a plus, but to often there is a lot of associated corruption involved, and as long as the tribal members get a nice per diem check, they don't question it. The tribe I grew up with spent a lot of money on investing in needed infrastructure programs for the tribe, i.e. healthcare, senior living etc, but tribal members were upset that their per diem checks were smaller than other tribes, and so they voted out the reform minded council members and replaced them with the old corrupt guard.
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If it gives jobs above minimum wage doing something. ANYTHING, then it's a net positive, even if the tribe doesn't receive a dime of the profits.
The problem isn't a lack of money, it's a lack of work. The reservations are deliberately placed in bad land with poor location. There's no industry. There's no work available aside from gas station attendant. When the majority of your community is on the dole, then there's a serious loss of purpose. Drugs and alcohol are rampant because there's no real reason not to blow your brain cells. Give the people something to work at. Something to be proud of, and it's infinitely better "I cleaned this hotel" "I dealt these cards"
On the other hand, trailer parks that the residents pay for are often extremely well taken care of. It's all they have, and they spent all they have to get it, and so it's their home.
It doesn't matter the color of your skin. It's a general rule that what isn't earned is not valued.
I disagree. Or more accurately, you're half right. It's not the housing - but it's also not the residents. Those same residents were living in the community before the housing and had a decent (though not yet prosperous) community. Re-read the paragraph that ends with "It offered, in other words, a path to wealth accumulation through property ownership—a path wiped out by public housing."
The problem is government interference in the housing market. It doesn't matter whether they tamper with explicit housing projects or through Section 8 housing vouchers. It's the tampering that screws things up.
These housing projects concentrate dysfunctional families and become breeding grounds for crime and gangs. It is so obvious that I can not understand why the government keeps doing it, except for kickbacks, excuse me, campaign donations, from the developers. Owners of modest single family residences don't do much for politicians.
Section 8 is interesting. Years ago when I was looking for an inexpensive house to buy, possibly as a rental, outside LA, I discovered that desert Palmdale had reasonable house prices but really high rental prices. It turned out that these were all Section 8 housing. The government subsidy was captured by the landlords in far-above-market rents. Given the destructive and thieving behavior of many of the tenants, the reduction in property value, maybe that was the cost of doing business.
I still like Section 8 better. It does not involve public construction, and in principle tenants can live anywhere they choose. In practice, if Section 8 housing started being rented in my neighborhood, I would be out like a shot.
I am not sure if there is an answer. Modern society and its expectations for deferred gratification and the work ethic seem to leave behind a lot of people who are unable/unwilling to live up to these.
Oops, I meant this reply for another comment blaming the tenants! I completely support leaving poor communities intact! Driving people out of their modest homes to replace it with public housing is awful.
You literally can design anything and this process will continue with same residents. A low density housing project maybe 40 years old was just boarded up near me.
These townhouses are no different than many others in the community exdept the other communities have better residents. No problem
Cabrini Greens anyone? Another housing project outside Chicago, now only a memory. Filled with crime, gangs and outright dangerous.
Briggs has a great expose on public housing:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_r_bGUPidGQ
I worked in Chicago back in the late 70's and early 80's and Cabrini Greens was always in the news. Even the mayor of Chicago moved into the Greens to try and prove that this government housing was safe. But of course she had about half of the Chicago police force there to protect her. No matter where you try to house animals, they are still animals.
We don't want people to think of Pruitt-Igoe as a failure if they're going to then translate that failure to all public housing or all government programs or all social welfare or all modernism.
Robert Fishman is the kind of intellectual that reads the Fountainhead and is convinced that Howard Roark is the bad guy.
I know being mean to random Mormons on the internet doesn’t accomplish anything and may hurt my cause because most here think I’m a nut.
I tried being reasonable with you scumbags. People with such stupid beliefs yet so devoted to them can’t be reasoned with. That’s why your church is evil. It’s created an army of bigoted morons who won’t listen to reason. You breed like fucking rabbits. You send out missionaries to indoctrinate other morons and have them breed like rabbits.
Kimball said blacks should join the priesthood and are equal to white members. Russ Nelson says you should love LGTB folks(they just can’t get married). That’s all well and good, but the majority of Mormons I encountered were hateful bigots.
“We won’t baptize dead holocaust victims unless the family approves” Then why does it keep happening?
You people are fucking despicable. I know being mean to you doesn’t accomplish shit, but you deserve much worse for funding such an evil cause.
And why do you want me to complain to the police in person? So I’ll be outed to friends, family, and coworkers? They know I hate Mormons and are on my side because they aren’t bigots.
So the cops will violate my civil rights or something? That’d just prove my point that your friend was a fascist pig because he pals around with other fascist pigs!
You stupid fuck!
"skip-stop" elevators that encouraged stairwell crime by only stopping on select floors
, as opposed to normal elevators that encouraged elevator crime by not stopping on select floors.
If you want to know the source of public housing ills, find out why Section 8 Housing appliances need to be replaced every 2 years.
Hint: The tenants treat it like shit cause they don't own it.
The tenants treat it like shit cause they don't own it.
How dare you! I always get my rental car detailed before I turn it back in.
More from Howard Husock , please.
"The Time the Federal Government Built a Flawed Housing Project and Tore It Down 20 Years Later"
Union job security plus Democratic electoral support. Win-win.