Frederick Douglass Houses

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The Frederick Douglass Houses are a public housing project located in the New York City borough of Manhattan, in the Manhattan Valley neighborhood of Upper West Side, named for civil rights pioneer Frederick Douglass. The actual buildings are located between 100th Street and 104th Street, to the west of Amsterdam Avenue and the east of Manhattan Avenue. The complex is owned and operated by the New York City Housing Authority.

The original portion of the complex consists of 17 buildings — 5, 9, 12, 17, 18, and 20-stories tall — completed on May 31, 1958 on a 21.76-acre site. The development includes 2,054 apartments housing some 4,588 residents. The Frederick Douglass Addition, completed on June 30, 1965, is a 16-story building with 306 residents on .55 acre on Amsterdam Avenue between West 102nd and West 103rd Streets.[1]

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[edit] Development

The development was approved by the New York City Planning Commission on February 7, 1952, as a low-rent housing project to be erected on a 22.5-acre site bounded by Manhattan Avenue, Amsterdam Avenue and West 100th and 104th Streets.[2]

The Frederick Douglass Playground covers 1.945 acres, on Amsterdam Avenue between 100th and 102nd Streets. Land for the playground was acquired by the city in 1954, and the playground was opened on September 10, 1958. The New York City Board of Estimate transferred the property from the New York City Housing Authority to the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation in August 1962, which still is responsible for management of the park.[3]

[edit] History

As a result of previous incidents, many local restaurants and fast food changes refuse to deliver take-out orders to the doors of residents, requiring that customers meet the delivery person at the ground floor.[4]

Two residents were killed in a November 1995 fire, when a couch left in a stairway vestibule caught fire and flames swept up the stairwell to the roof of the building.[5] The NYCHA was criticized by the New York City Council for fires related to its use of paint in stairwells deemed unsafe by the New York City Fire Department, focusing on the incident at the Douglass Houses.[6]

Despite signs of improvement in the early 1990s in the surrounding area, the Frederick Douglass Houses were a stubborn and persistent site of drug dealing as the crack epidemic was continuing during that period.[7]

[edit] Notable residents

[edit] References