University Homes
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In 1994 the
Atlanta Housing Authority The Atlanta Housing Authority (AHA) is an agency that provides affordable housing for low-income families in Atlanta. Today, the AHA is the largest housing agency in Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia and one of the largest in the United States, servi ...
, encouraged by the federal
HOPE VI HOPE VI is a program of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. It is intended to revitalize the most distressed public housing projects in the United States into mixed-income developments. Its philosophy is largely based o ...
program, embarked on a policy created for the purpose of comprehensive revitalization of severely distressed public housing developments. These distressed public housing properties were replaced by mixed-income communities.


Replaced by mixed-income communities


State Capitol Homes (1941-2003)

State Capitol Homes (aka "Capitol Homes") was completed on April 7, 1941 and designed to serve black families in low-rise housing. The 694 units demolished in 2003 were replaced by Capitol Gateway, which includes 1,000 units of housing for various income levels.


Carver Community (1953–2000)

The Carver Community housing project (aka "Carver Homes") in southeast Atlanta was finished on February 17, 1953, costing $8.6 million and consisting of 990 units for African-Americans.Schank, Katie. Producing the Projects: Atlanta and the Cultural Creation of Public Housing, 1933-2011. 2016. Proquest. Named for George Washington Carver, the project was located near Joyland, an amusement park for black Atlantans. The project was demolished in 2000 and was partially replaced with the Villages at Carver. It is currently undergoing further revitalization by the Atlanta Housing Authority.


John J. Eagan Homes

John J. Eagan Homes, also known as Eagan Homes, as a 677-unit complex built in 1941 for black families. It cost $2 million to build and was located in
Vine City English Avenue and Vine City are two adjacent and closely linked neighborhoods of Atlanta, Georgia. Together the neighborhoods make up neighborhood planning unit L. The two neighborhoods are frequently cited together in reference to shared ...
. The complex was torn down in the 2000s and replaced by Magnolia Park.


East Lake Meadows

The East Lake Meadows public housing project was a 654 unit community built in 1971 and was one of the most infamous of all of Atlanta's public housing. At the time the nation's largest
turnkey A turnkey, a turnkey project, or a turnkey operation (also spelled turn-key) is a type of project that is constructed so that it can be sold to any buyer as a completed product. This is contrasted with build to order, where the constructor builds ...
project, East Lake Meadows was immediately plagued by maintenance problems due to poor construction. Crime rates soared, and reporter Bill Seldon for the
Atlanta Constitution ''The Atlanta Journal-Constitution'' (''AJC'') is an American daily newspaper based in Atlanta metropolitan area, metropolitan area of Atlanta, Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia. It is the flagship publication of Cox Enterprises. The ''Atlanta Jo ...
highlighted the project in a series of articles comparing the high number of killings in Atlanta to Vietnam. These articles led to East Lake Meadows gaining the nickname of "Little Vietnam", and helped contribute to the turning of public opinion against public housing. In the 1990s, as part of his efforts to revitalize the East Lake neighborhood, developer and philanthropist
Tom Cousins Thomas Grady Cousins (born December 7, 1931) is an American real estate developer, sports supporter and philanthropist, primarily based in Atlanta, Georgia. Cousins was a leader in shaping the skyline in Atlanta, and he purchased and brought the ...
began working with the Atlanta Housing Authority to replace East Lake Meadows with a mixed-income community. This took place in a larger context of tearing down Atlanta's public housing. In addition to mixed-income housing units, the redevelopment plan included an education center, a private golf course, and various local amenities. Over the course of ten years, East Lake Meadows was demolished and replaced with The Villages at East Lake, the total project costing $172 million.


Henry Grady Homes

Completed in 1942, Henry Grady Homes (aka "Grady Homes") originally contained 495 units for black families. Located in the
Sweet Auburn The Sweet Auburn Historic District is a historic African-American neighborhood along and surrounding Auburn Avenue, east of downtown Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The name Sweet Auburn was coined by John Wesley Dobbs, referring to the "rich ...
neighborhood, it was demolished and replaced with the Auburn Pointe mixed-income community.


Joel Chandler Harris Homes

Built in 1957, Joel Chandler Harris Homes (aka "Harris Homes") was a 510 unit housing site and the last project built that was intended for white residents before the housing projects were integrated after passage of the federal Civil Rights Act in 1964.Stone, Clarence. Regime Politics: Governing Atlanta 1946-1988. University Press of Kansas, 1989. It was replaced by Ashley Collegetown. The adjacent John O. Chiles Senior Residence Building was renovated.


John Hope Homes

Built adjacent to University Homes in 1941, John Hope Homes 606 units was originally built for black families. In the 2000s, it was demolished and replaced with The Villages at Castleberry Hill.


McDaniel Glenn

The McDaniel Glenn housing project was built in 1967, with the Martin Luther King Memorial Building (a highrise for the elderly) constructed in 1970. Making the complex peak at 768 units Part of the Mechanicsville neighborhood, the complex was demolished in 2006. By 2007, Columbia Residential had completed their redevelopment of the property, named Columbia at Mechanicsville Station. The Martin Luther King High-Rise was demolished with explosives on February 14, 2010.


Herman E. Perry Homes

Herman E. Perry Homes (aka "Perry Homes") was completed in 1954 with 1,100 units for black families. Part of the project was destroyed by a tornado on March 24, 1975, with the buildings being replaced in 1976–77. The project's demolition was completed in 1999, and it was replaced with the West Highlands development. In addition to mixed-income housing, it includes various other amenities such as a
YMCA YMCA, sometimes regionally called the Y, is a worldwide youth organisation based in Geneva, Switzerland, with more than 64 million beneficiaries in 120 countries. It has nearly 90,000 staff, some 920,000 volunteers and 12,000 branches w ...
.


Techwood Homes / Clark Howell Homes

Techwood Homes was the first federally funded public housing project in the United States, with 1,230 units opening in 1936. Located in the
Centennial Hill Centennial Hill is a district at the northern edge of Downtown Atlanta, Georgia. The name was originally coined by Hines Interests and applied only to their planned development in the area. Although the development was never started and the la ...
district of
Downtown Atlanta Downtown Atlanta is the central business district of Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The largest of the city's three commercial districts (Midtown Atlanta, Midtown and Buckhead being the others), it is the location of many corporate and region ...
, it was joined by Clark Howell Homes (both all white) in 1940. In the run-up to the 1996 Olympics, Techwood and Clark Howell Homes were demolished and replaced by Centennial Place.


University Homes

Built in 1938 on the site of the former Beaver Slide slum. Seen as the African American counterpart to
Techwood Homes Techwood Homes was an early public housing project in the Atlanta, Georgia in the United States, opened just before the First Houses. The whites-only Techwood Homes replaced an integrated settlement of low-income people known as Tanyard Bot ...
- the first public housing project in the nation. Architect
William Augustus Edwards William Augustus Edwards, also known as William A. Edwards (December 8, 1866 – March 30, 1939) was an Atlanta-based American architect renowned for the educational buildings, courthouses and other public and private buildings that he designed i ...
. Residents of the deteriorating community were relocated in 2006, with 500 units being demolished in 2009. In September 2015, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) awarded a Choice Neighborhoods Implementation Grant to revitalize the former University Homes public housing site, along with the Atlanta University Center, Ashview Heights, and the Vine City neighborhoods. Th
"University Choice Neighborhood" housing plan
renamed University Homes to "Scholars Landing." Construction will be complete in 2023.


Demolished (vacant land)


Antoine Graves Elderly Highrise

Senior citizen highrise built 1965. Architect
John C. Portman Jr. John Calvin Portman Jr. (December 4, 1924 – December 29, 2017) was an American neofuturistic architect and real estate developer widely known for popularizing hotels and office buildings with multi-storied interior atria. Portman also had a p ...
who designed numerous high-rises in
Downtown Atlanta Downtown Atlanta is the central business district of Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The largest of the city's three commercial districts (Midtown Atlanta, Midtown and Buckhead being the others), it is the location of many corporate and region ...
(such as
AmericasMart AmericasMart Atlanta is a wholesale trade center located in Downtown Atlanta, Georgia. The exhibition center is one of the largest permanent wholesale trade centers in the world. AmericasMart Atlanta consists of three buildings totaling seven mi ...
,
Peachtree Center Peachtree Center is a district located in Downtown Atlanta, Georgia. Most of the structures that make up the district were designed by Atlanta architect John C. Portman Jr. A defining feature of the Peachtree Center is a network of enclosed ped ...
, and
Hyatt Regency Atlanta The Hyatt Regency Atlanta is a business hotel located on Peachtree Street in downtown Atlanta, Georgia. Opened in 1967 as the Regency Hyatt House, John C. Portman Jr.'s revolutionary 22-story atrium design for the hotel has influenced hotel de ...
). This was one of Portman's earliest and most influential projects, his first atrium building and only public housing project. It was located at 126 SE Hilliard St. SE, Downtown, and was demolished 2009, including annex. Portman attempted to prevent the building from being demolished, but was unsuccessful.


Bankhead Courts

Bankhead Courts was built in 1970 and consisted of 550 housing units. , "demolition was underway".


Bowen Homes (1964-2009)

Bowen Homes was a large multifamily housing project built in northwest Atlanta in 1964. Named after John W. E. Bowen, Sr., it included 650 units in a sprawling complex of 104 yellow brick residence buildings, A.D. Williams elementary school, a library, and a day care center. Most inaugural residents were relocated from
Buttermilk Bottom Buttermilk Bottom, also known as Buttermilk Bottoms or Black Bottom, was an African-American neighborhood in central Atlanta, centered on the area where the Atlanta Civic Center now stands in the Old Fourth Ward. It was considered a slum area, h ...
in the Old Fourth Ward. Located on Bankhead Highway (since renamed Donald Lee Hollowell Parkway) just inside I-285, the site is now classified as part of the neighborhood of Brookview Heights. On October 13, 1980 a furnace boiler exploded at the day care center, killing four children and a teacher. Some residents initially claimed the blast was related to the Atlanta child murders of 1979–1981, but it turned out that the boiler's water had been drained for maintenance at the end of the previous heating season but had not been refilled. On October 13 the cool weather of autumn returned, the day care center requested that the heat be turned on, and maintenance staff relit the boiler, not realizing it was empty. This caused a boiler explosion thirty minutes later. In 1982, the
Atlanta Housing Authority The Atlanta Housing Authority (AHA) is an agency that provides affordable housing for low-income families in Atlanta. Today, the AHA is the largest housing agency in Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia and one of the largest in the United States, servi ...
(AHA) settled out-of-court for $800,000 with ten families seeking damages. Rapper
Shawty Lo Carlos Rico Walker (March 22, 1976 – September 21, 2016), better known as Shawty Lo, was an American rapper from Atlanta, Georgia. He initially came to prominence as a founding member of the Southern hip hop group D4L, and in 2000 founded D ...
was raised in Bowen Homes. He created a mixtape called '' Bowen Homes Carlos'' dedicated to the housing project. Bowen Homes was also featured in rapper
T.I. Clifford Joseph Harris Jr. (born September 25, 1980), known professionally as T.I. or Tip, is an American rapper and singer raised in Atlanta, Georgia. Harris is credited as a pioneer of the hip hop subgenre trap music, along with fellow Georgi ...
's video ''
What Up, What's Haapnin' "What Up, What's Haapnin'" is a song by American rapper T.I., released on September 2, 2008, as the fifth single from his sixth studio album ''Paper Trail'' (2008). The song, which was produced by high-profile American record producer Drumma Boy, ...
''. Other musical groups from Bowen Homes include Shop Boyz and Hood Rock. Boxer
Evander Holyfield Evander Holyfield (born October 19, 1962) is an American former professional boxer who competed between 1984 and 2011. He reigned as the undisputed championship (boxing), undisputed champion in the cruiserweight (boxing), cruiserweight division ...
grew up in Bowen. Bowen Homes was rife with crime. Police reports show 168 violent crimes in the six months between June 2007 and January 2008, including five murders. It was the last large AHA housing project left when it was demolished in 2009. Its razing made Atlanta the first major municipality in the U.S.A. to do so, and its demolition brought the city's era of large multifamily housing projects to a close.


Englewood Manor

Built in 1970, 324 units of Englewood manor were demolished 2009 by the AHA. The land, which has been under control of the AHA since it was developed in 1970, still sits empty .


Forest Cove

Forest Cove was torn down in 2024. It was not a housing project. It was privately owned.


Gilbert Gardens

Gilbert Gardens, also known as Poole Creek, was built in the 1960s and torn down in 2004. 226 unit housing projects were demolished and families were displaced.


Alonzo F. Herndon Homes

Alonzo F. Herndon Homes, also known as Herndon Homes, was completed in 1941, containing 520 units for African Americans. It was demolished in 2010. The project was named for Alonzo F. Herndon, who was born a slave, and through founding the
Atlanta Life Insurance Company The Atlanta Life Financial Group was founded by Alonzo Herndon in Atlanta, Georgia. Born into slavery, he started in Atlanta as a young barber, eventually owning three shops. He became Atlanta's richest African American and a highly successful ...
became Atlanta's richest African American. On June 15, 2016, the Atlanta Housing Authority announced a development team had been selected to create a mixed-use mixed-income community, called Herndon Square, on the site. The first of five phases began construction in January 2020, and is scheduled to complete in Spring 2021. Herndon Homes was a filming location for the motion picture The Lottery Ticket.


Hollywood Courts

, the demolition of the 202 public housing units "was almost complete".


Jonesboro North

145 units were torn down in 2008.


Jonesboro South

160 units were torn down in 2008. Rapper
Young Thug Jeffery Lamar Williams II (born August 16, 1991), known professionally as Young Thug, is an American rapper. Known for his eccentric vocal style and fashion, he is considered an influential figure in modern hip hop music, hip hop and trap music ...
was raised in Jonesboro South Apartments.


Leila Valley

225 units were torn down in 2008.


Palmer House

Palmer House was a senior citizen highrise. Built in 1966, it was named after
Charles Forrest Palmer Charles Forrest Palmer (December 29, 1892June 16, 1973) was an Atlanta real estate developer who became an expert on public housing and organized the building of Techwood Homes, the first public housing project in the United States. He would lat ...
, first president of the
Atlanta Housing Authority The Atlanta Housing Authority (AHA) is an agency that provides affordable housing for low-income families in Atlanta. Today, the AHA is the largest housing agency in Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia and one of the largest in the United States, servi ...
. It was demolished floor-by-floor in Spring 2011.


Roosevelt House

Roosevelt House was a senior citizen highrise with 150 apartments located at the southwest corner of
Centennial Olympic Park Centennial Olympic Park is a public park located in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, owned and operated by the Georgia World Congress Center Authority. It was built by the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games (ACOG) as part of the infrastructur ...
Drive and North Avenue. Built in 1973, it was named after
Franklin Delano Roosevelt Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882April 12, 1945), also known as FDR, was the 32nd president of the United States, serving from 1933 until his death in 1945. He is the longest-serving U.S. president, and the only one to have served ...
, the American president who, with Atlanta developer
Charles Forrest Palmer Charles Forrest Palmer (December 29, 1892June 16, 1973) was an Atlanta real estate developer who became an expert on public housing and organized the building of Techwood Homes, the first public housing project in the United States. He would lat ...
, founded the national public housing policy. The last residents left in 2009, and it was demolished with explosives on February 27, 2011.


Thomasville Heights Projects

The Thomasville Heights Projects were built in 1967, with 350 units. They were demolished in 2010.


U-Rescue Villa

The U-Rescue Villa was torn down in May 2008.


Section 8 communities


The View at Rosa Burney

The 288 apartment units once a part of the Mc Daniel Glenn housing project were cleaned up and turned into a section 8 apartment complex.


The Element at Kirkwood Apartments

The apartment units once were a part of the Eastlake Meadows housing project but the Atlanta Housing Authority decided to keep the units and turn them into
Section 8 housing Section 8 of the Housing Act of 1937 (), commonly known as Section 8, provides rental housing assistance to low-income households in the United States by paying private landlords on behalf of these tenants. Approximately 68% of this assistan ...
.


Edgewood Court

The Edgewood Court housing project, built in 1950, is a Section 8 housing project with 204 available units.


Not demolished


Martin Street Plaza

Martin Street Plaza, in Summerhill, also known as the Summerhill Projects, built in 1979 continue operating today.


Westminster

Westminster is a 32 unit public housing community in Atlanta, Georgia.


East Lake Elderly Highrise

East Lake Highrise is a 150 unit affordable housing community in Atlanta, East Lake Highrise is owned and managed by the Atlanta Housing Authority also is the last remaining structure of the East lake meadows housing project.


Cosby Spear Elderly Highrise

Cosby Spear Highrise is a 282 unit affordable housing community in Atlanta, Georgia. The community is located in the 5th Congressional District of Georgia also the last remaining structure of the U-Rescue Villa housing project.


Hillcrest Homes

Hillcrest (demolished) 100 units used to be owned by the Atlanta housing Authority but was sold to the East Point Housing Authority and has sat vacant but undemolished after the East Point Housing Authority (EPHA) failed to give out section 8 applications.


Hidden Village Homes

Hidden Village Homes is a 500-unit abandoned housing project once owned by the AHA located 2208 Verbena street, in northwest Atlanta. The complex sits in the Dixie Hill neighborhood. It was abandoned due to fire damage.


John O. Chiles Elderly Highrise

John O. Chiles (Harris III) is a 190 unit affordable housing community in Atlanta, Georgia. The community is located in the 5th Congressional neighborhood the last remaining structure of Harris Homes.


Ed Tucker Memorial Homes

Built in 1949, Ed Tucker Memorial Homes (aka “Tucker Homes”) was a 200-unit co-operative housing project designed as a memorial to veterans of Atlanta who gave their lives in
World War 2 World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies and the Axis powers. Nearly all of the world's countries participated, with many nations mobilisin ...
. A combined effort between the FHA and the non-profit Veteran's Corporation, it was named for a young B-24 navigator from College Park, Georgia who died in the battle of Rabaul. The complex was renovated in 2004 and sold as a private development renamed “The Station at Richmond Hill.”


References


External links


Atlanta Housing Authority
{{DEFAULTSORT:Demolished Public Housing Projects In Atlanta African-American history in Atlanta Demolished buildings and structures in Atlanta Former populated places in Georgia (U.S. state) Public housing in Atlanta Urban renewal in Atlanta