Julia C. Lathrop Homes is a Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) public housingproject located along the line between the Lincoln Park and North Center neighborhoods on the north side of Chicago, Illinois, United States. It is bordered by the neighborhoods of Bucktown and Roscoe Village. Completed in 1938 by the Public Works Administration, Lathrop Homes was one of the first Chicago public housing projects. Lathrop Homes was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012 and is currently undergoing restoration. Lathrop Homes consists of two-story brick row houses and three- and four-story apartment buildings separated by landscaped courtyards and linked by small archways in a campus-like arrangement.[2] There are a total of 925 units on 35.5 acres of land (approximately three and a half square blocks).[3]
In keeping with the federal neighborhood segregation policy of the time, the development was intended for whites only.[4] As the development matured, it became racially integrated,[3][8] and has been called "the city's most diverse public housing neighborhood".[9]
Crime and gangs
In recent decades, the Julia C. Lathrop homes have been subject to many of the same problems of increasing crime as other housing projects in Chicago, including narcotics trafficking and gang activity. The housing project was dominated by the Latin Kings street gang.[10][11][12]
Proposed redevelopment
In July 2006, the Chicago Housing Authority announced its intention to demolish the Lathrop Homes and redevelop the site.[3][6] Residents and preservationists protested and Landmarks Illinois developed a plan to renovate the complex as affordable "green" housing.[2][8][13][14][15][16][17][18] In early 2011, the authority cleared residents from the north end of the development;[19][20] in November 2011, it awarded the redevelopment contract for the site to a team with experience in architectural preservation and sustainability.[5] In October 2012, the Chicago Housing Authority approved the demolition of 1800 units including some from Lathrop Homes; however, how many of those demolitions relate to Lathrop Homes and when demolition would begin was not announced.[21]
^Tracie Rozhon, "New Deal Architecture Faces Bulldozer,"The New York Times, February 8, 2009: "In Chicago, architectural historians have joined with residents of Lathrop Homes—riverfront rows of historic brick public housing—to try to persuade the Chicago Housing Authority not to raze the complex."