South Boston Infill and Small Developments

The shadows cast by Pruitt Igoe and its brethren are indeed long and persistent. Pruitt Igoe, with nearly 3,000 apartments, lasted less than two decades. Fully opened in 1956, demolished in 1972. In essence, this high density housing for families who had no financial stake in the buildings they were renting was nothing more than a warehousing of people.

From a NY Times asrticle on Cabrini Gree, a project similar to Pruitt Igoe.
.... In 1990, Chicago’s population started to tick up for the first time in 40 years; the area surrounding Cabrini-Green added 4,000 white residents during the previous decade, and vacant lots that had sold for $30,000 a few years earlier were being snapped up for five times that amount. As the fortunes of cities changed once again, public housing experienced a new pressure. HUD began to award municipalities tens of millions of dollars in grants to tear down their public-housing high-rises and replace them with much smaller developments that mixed public-housing families with higher-income renters and market-rate owners. Proposals to preserve some of the towers, filling in the cleared land around them with a variety of housing types, were rejected. Many low-rise developments in rejuvenating areas were targeted as well. A majority of the relocated public-housing residents were given Section 8 vouchers to rent from landlords in the private market. Nationwide, 250,000 public-housing units have been demolished since the 1990s. Atlanta, Baltimore, Columbus, Memphis, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Tucson — just about every American city got in on the action. But no city knocked down as many as Chicago.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/06/...-with-them-the-promise-of-public-housing.html
 
BeeLine, once again your continuing record of our city is inspiring me to wander places I would not normally wander. My "South" mostly is the South End. I now intend to explore our other "South." I wonder if this is, perhaps, the best urban story we have in our changing story? As a wise man once said - "It's all about the neighborhoods."
 
Ugh I was wondering about 200 Old Colony, was really hoping they would save that building or at least the facade. That sucks theyre blowing it up for some cheap 5 over 1 bullshit that's everywhere in Southie at this point
 
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What is with the building in the background, with the blue sales and rental sign, that looks like a propped front for the mansard Victorian behind it?
 
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If the materials are decent on 480 W Broadway I think this will look great.
 
If the materials are decent on 480 W Broadway I think this will look great.

I agree, Suffolk, but my point wasn't so much about the architecture of the building in isolation, but what it does in context to that square. Its effect (compared to what was there previously in that Google view) is transforming.

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