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According to Christina Vella, historian of modern Europe, the Pontalba Buildings were not the first apartment buildings in the present-day U.S., as is commonly believed. They were originally built as row houses, not rental apartments. The row houses were turned into apartments during the 1930s renovations (during the Great Depression).
The Louis Heaton Pink Houses or Pink Houses are a housing project in New York City that were established in the East New York neighborhood in Brooklyn in 1959. It consists of 22 eight-storey buildings with 1,500 apartment units over a 31.1-acre expanse, bordered by Crescent Street, Linden Boulevard, Elderts Lane and Stanley Avenue.
Hancock Apartments; Hill & Chase Street Apartments; Herman & Vine Street Apartments; Vine/Arch Street Apartments; Dublin/East Broad Street Apartments; Athens/Atlanta Avenue Apartments; Jack R. Wells Homes; Vine Circle Apartments; Nellie B. Homes; College & Hoyt Street Apartments; Jessie B. Denney Tower; Bonnie Lane Apartments; Towne View Place
Nearly two-thirds of all formerly incarcerated people in Georgia are rearrested and return to prison within three years of their release.. It’s easy to reduce this statistic to some sort of ...
A Rochester Hills apartment community is being sued by a fair housing group that says the community's blanket ban on leasing to any tenants with a past felony conviction violates federal law.
Baisley Park Houses is a housing project in South Jamaica, Queens, New York, completed on April 30, 1961.The development consists of five, 8-story buildings with 386 apartment units for an estimated 1,057 people.
The United States has a higher rate of incarceration per capita than any other nation: 698 of every 100,000 residents wind up behind bars. And when those offenders are released, they often face an ...
The Dunbar Apartments, also known as the Paul Laurence Dunbar Garden Apartments or Dunbar Garden Apartments, is a complex of buildings located on West 149th and West 150th Streets between Frederick Douglass Boulevard/Macombs Place and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.