Housing Overview 26 Buildings and Over 4,000 Units of Housing

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Housing Overview 26 Buildings and Over 4,000 Units of Housing Housing Overview 26 buildings and over 4,000 units of housing PERMANENT SUPPORTIVE & WORKFORCE HOUSING | NEW YORK CITY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 TIMES SQUARE THE DOROTHY ROSS PRINCE GEORGE THE CHRISTOPHER SCHERMERHORN BROOK THE LEE Manhattan | Opened 1991 FRIEDMAN RESIDENCE Manhattan | Opened 1999 Manhattan | Opened 2004 Brooklyn | Opened 2009 Bronx | Opened 2010 Manhattan | Opened 2010 Manhattan | Opened 1996 • 652 Units • 416 Units • 207 Units (includes 40 • 217 Units • 190 Units • 263 Units • Low-income working • 178 Units • Low-income working transitional units) • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income working persons and formerly • Low-income working persons and formerly • Low-income working persons (many in arts and persons and formerly persons, formerly homeless homeless single adults persons (many in arts and homeless single adults persons, formerly homeless entertainment industry), homeless single adults single adults and vulnerable • Owned and managed by entertainment industry), • Owned and managed by single adults and vulnerable and formerly homeless • Owned and managed by youth (many of whom have Breaking Ground seniors and people living Breaking Ground youth (many of whom have single adults Breaking Ground aged out of foster care) with HIV/AIDS aged out of foster care) • Social services provided • Social services provided by • Owned and managed by • Social services provided by • Owned and managed by by the Center for Urban • Managed by Breaking CUCS • Owned and managed by Breaking Ground BronxWorks Breaking Ground Ground Breaking Ground Community Services (CUCS) • Listed on the National • Social services provided by • Breaking Ground’s first • Social services provided by • Breaking Ground’s first • Owned and social services Register of Historic Places • Social services provided by CUCS and The Actors Fund residence in the Bronx CUCS and The Door provided by The Actors Fund • The historic Prince George CUCS and Good Shepherd residence and still the • Breaking Ground’s first new 2,400 sq. ft. community • LEED Silver Ballroom and adjacent Services • largest supportive housing construction project space used by tenants and Project cost: $59 million gallery event spaces provide • project in the nation • Site of the former Robert On-site community theater community members rental revenue to support • Listed on the National McBurney YMCA (which • Breaking Ground’s work • Project cost: $59 million • LEED Silver Register of Historic Places inspired the Village People • CSA program brings fresh, song, “YMCA”) • Project cost: $43 million • Project cost: $50 million affordable produce to • Project cost: $32 million tenants and community • Project cost: $40 million 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 THE DOMENECH LENNIGER HEGEMAN 40 RIVERSIDE BOSTON ROAD REDWOOD SYDELLE Brooklyn | Opened 2011 Bronx | Opened 2011 Brooklyn | Opened 2012 Manhattan | Opened 2015 Bronx | Opened 2016 Brooklyn | Opened 2016 Bronx | Opened 2016 • 72 Units • 92 Units • 161 Units • 55 Units • 154 Units • 80 Units • 102 Units • Low-income and formerly • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income working • Low-income seniors • Low-income working and homeless seniors families/individuals and persons and formerly families/individuals persons and formerly • Social services provided by formerly homeless families/ • Owned, managed, and formerly homeless single homeless single adults • Owned and managed by homeless single adults Breaking Ground individuals adults social services provided by • Owned and managed by Breaking Ground • Owned and managed by • Owned by East Brooklyn • Managed by Breaking Breaking Ground • Managed by Breaking Breaking Ground Breaking Ground Congregations (EBC) and Ground Ground • Breaking Ground’s first • Social services provided by • Social services provided managed by Wavecrest • Owned and social services housing project 100% for • Owned and social services CUCS by Services for the Management provided by CUCS seniors provided by CUCS • Features a community UnderServed (SUS) • Funded in part by NYS • Project cost: $24 million garden for use by tenants and neighborhood residents Medicaid savings initiative • LEED Silver to target high-cost users of healthcare • Project cost: $43 million • Project cost: $49 million Updated April 1, 2021 PERMANENT SUPPORTIVE & WORKFORCE HOUSING | NEW YORK CITY, CONTINUED 15 16 17 18 19 A SCATTER SITE PARK HOUSE WEBSTER RESIDENCE LA CENTRAL EDWIN’S PLACE THE HANNIGAN BETANCES Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens Bronx | Opened 2017 Bronx | Opened 2018 Bronx | Opened 2019 Brooklyn | Opened 2021 Manhattan | Opened 2021 Bronx | In construction • 171 Units Comprised of two adjacent buildings, Park House and Webster • 161 Units • 126 Units • 117 Units • 152 Units • Formerly homeless Avenue together form our second-largest residential development, • Low-income working • Low-income working and • Low-income working and • • Seniors who have individuals and our first foray into affordable family housing. persons and formerly formerly homeless families/ formerly homeless families/ experienced or are at risk of • Units “scattered” in multiple • 248 Units (affordable • 171 Units (supportive homeless single adults individuals individuals homelessness properties operated by Co-owned and managed by Managed by Breaking housing) housing) • • Co-owned and managed by • • Breaking Ground’s first private landlords Breaking Ground Ground • Low-income working • Low-income working Breaking Ground passive house project • Social services provided by families/individuals persons and formerly • Co-owned and social • Co-owned and social • Owned and social services • Part of the NYCHA NextGen Breaking Ground homeless single adults services provided by services provided by provided by CUCS • Owned and managed by program Breaking Ground • Owned and managed by Comunilife African American Planning Commission Inc. (AAPCI) • Project cost: $98 million • Enterprise Green Breaking Ground • Larger project will include nearly 1,000 affordable • Project cost: $75 million • Project cost: $88 million • Social services provided by CUCS units, YMCA, restaurant and retail space • Enterprise Green • Project cost: $67 million • Project cost: $64 million B C 90 SANDS STREET SUTPHIN BLVD Brooklyn | In construction Queens | In pre-development • 491 Units • 115 Units • Low-to-moderate-income • Low-income and formerly working persons and homeless seniors formerly homeless single • Breaking Ground’s first adults residence in Queens Former Watchtower Society • • 15,000 sf Community Residences Healthcare Network (CHN) • Project cost: $233 million medical clinic on-site • Project cost: $68 million BREAKINGGROUND.ORG PERMANENT SUPPORTIVE & WORKFORCE HOUSING | CT & UPSTATE NY 20 21 22 BETTY RUTH AND CEDARWOODS EASTMAN COMMONS MILTON B. HOLLANDER Willimantic, CT | Opened 2012 Rochester, NY | Opened 2012 FOUNDATION CENTER Hartford, CT | Opened 2009 • 60 Units • 80 Units • Low-income working • Low income working • 70 Units persons persons and formerly homeless single adults • Low-income working • Owned by Breaking Ground; families Third party property • Owned by Breaking Ground; • Owned by Breaking Ground; management Third party property Third party property • LEED Silver management management • Project cost: $14 million • Project cost: $15 million • 13,000 sq. ft. of commercial space • Project cost: $24 million TRANSITIONAL HOUSING & DROP-IN CENTERS 23 24 25 26 THE ANDREWS MIDWOOD EAST FLATBUSH QUEENS DROP-IN CENTER STABILIZATION BEDS Manhattan | Opened 2009 Brooklyn | Opened 2016 Brooklyn | Opened 2017 Queens | Opened May 2017 Various Locations (ongoing construction) Known as Safe Havens, Breaking Ground’s transitional residences provide private rooms with shared • 220 units (on average/ bathrooms and living areas, meals, plus medical and psychiatric care; social services and housing • 75-person capacity once capacity varies) assistance provided by Breaking Ground. construction completed • Social services and housing • 146 Units • 51 Units • 110 Units • Street homeless individuals assistance provided by Breaking Ground • Chronically street homeless • Chronically street homeless • Chronically street homeless • Breaking Ground’s first individuals (men only) individuals individuals drop-in center • Owned by Breaking Ground • Meals and respite from the elements; social services • Formerly a “flophouse” on and housing assistance the Bowery provided by Breaking • Units designed through a Ground competition co-sponsored by the Architectural League of New York • Project cost: $14 million BREAKINGGROUND.ORG Locations Buildings and program sites in New York City and beyond Hartford, CT 20 21 9 14 Willimantic, CT 16 758 15 NEW APARTMENTS 12 IN DEVELOPMENT 17 6 19 A 152 11 BRONX 2 22 Rochester, NY 1 4 491 3 BROOKLYN 23 7 B 115 5 26 C QUEENS 18 8 BUILDING 10 13 25 THE FUTURE 24 = permanent housing = transitional housing/drop-in center = Breaking Ground office BREAKINGGROUND.ORG.
Recommended publications
  • Breaking Ground in Sheridan 2016 Has Been a Busy Year for Habitat for Humanity of Metro Denver
    habitat newsletter | summer 16 breaking ground in Sheridan 2016 has been a busy year for Habitat for Humanity of Metro Denver. We’ve been building, renovating and repairing homes from Castle Rock to Montbello – and many neighborhoods in between! But we’re not stopping there… we’re excited to announce that construction is about to begin on Sheridan Square, our largest development in our 37-year history. Located on a 4.35-acre former elementary school site in the city of Sheridan (near Federal & Hampden), our plans include the construction of 63 energy-efficient homes built over the next four years. These homes will take the collective work of more than 40,000 volunteers, and will provide stable and affordable housing for ap- proximately 130 adults and 225 children. Sheridan Square will forever transform the City of Sheridan. Its 63 new homes will add 6% more owner-occupied housing units to the city, creating long-term and stable homeownership within this community. Sheridan Square will also provide roughly $77,000 in property taxes to the city each year. This transformative community would not be possible without the generous lead funding from Wells Fargo Community Foundation, Arapahoe County Housing and Community Development Services, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and Ed and Roxanne Fie Anderson. “I can honestly say that because Habitat provided letter stability; it helped me secure a future.” from our CEO Dear Friends, Habitat for Humanity is having a great year as we ramp up our efforts to serve more than 120 families in 2016. However, “The number of as Denver continues to top the “Best Places to Live” lists, our growing population is putting intense pressure on housing inventory.
    [Show full text]
  • American Catholic Studies Ewslette
    AMERICAN CATHOLIC STUDIES EWSLETTE CUSHWA CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF AMERICAN CATHOLICISM Change ofHabit n 1993, Leslie Tentler criti­ tion of the women who supplied the excusable among historians of American cized the lack of historical unpaid labor for the parochial school women. In The Poor Belong to Us: attention paid to women system and a vast network of Catholic Catholic Charities and American Welfare religious. Considering the social service institutions. (1997), Dorothy Brown and Elizabeth vast numbers of educational, Several groundbreaking works have McKeown describe how Catholic charitable, and social service fostered an appreciation for the astonish­ women religious, while caring for institutions created and staffed ing achievements of Catholic women massive numbers of Catholic immi­ by American Catholic nuns, Tender religious in an age when society pre­ grants, contributed mightily to the observed, "Had women under secular or scribed narrowly limited roles for development of the American welfare Protestant auspices compiled this record women. In the 19th century, the con­ system. of achievement, they would today be a vent provided women with unequalled In Say Little, Do Much: Nurses, thoroughly researched population. But opportunities for education and au­ Nuns and Hospitals in the Nineteenth Catholic sisters are not much studied, tonomy; in fact, these studies are occa­ Century (2001), Sioban Nelson lifts what certainly not by women's historians or sionally tinged with wistfulness for a she calls the "veil of invisibility" on even, to any great extent, by historians time when Catholic women had more nursing nuns. Although women reli­ of American Catholicism." opportunities within the Church than gious founded and operated more than Nearly a decade has passed since outside of it.
    [Show full text]
  • The Pacific Coast and the Casual Labor Economy, 1919-1933
    © Copyright 2015 Alexander James Morrow i Laboring for the Day: The Pacific Coast and the Casual Labor Economy, 1919-1933 Alexander James Morrow A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Washington 2015 Reading Committee: James N. Gregory, Chair Moon-Ho Jung Ileana Rodriguez Silva Program Authorized to Offer Degree: Department of History ii University of Washington Abstract Laboring for the Day: The Pacific Coast and the Casual Labor Economy, 1919-1933 Alexander James Morrow Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor James Gregory Department of History This dissertation explores the economic and cultural (re)definition of labor and laborers. It traces the growing reliance upon contingent work as the foundation for industrial capitalism along the Pacific Coast; the shaping of urban space according to the demands of workers and capital; the formation of a working class subject through the discourse and social practices of both laborers and intellectuals; and workers’ struggles to improve their circumstances in the face of coercive and onerous conditions. Woven together, these strands reveal the consequences of a regional economy built upon contingent and migratory forms of labor. This workforce was hardly new to the American West, but the Pacific Coast’s reliance upon contingent labor reached its apogee after World War I, drawing hundreds of thousands of young men through far flung circuits of migration that stretched across the Pacific and into Latin America, transforming its largest urban centers and working class demography in the process. The presence of this substantial workforce (itinerant, unattached, and racially heterogeneous) was out step with the expectations of the modern American worker (stable, married, and white), and became the warrant for social investigators, employers, the state, and other workers to sharpen the lines of solidarity and exclusion.
    [Show full text]
  • Ten Affordable Housing Projects
    Urban Land Magazine Americas Asia Pacific Europe Foundation Join ULI Custom Search INDUSTRY SECTORS CAPITAL MARKETS TRENDS SUSTAINABILITY DEVELOPMENT PLANNING/DESIGN INSIDE ULI ULI MEETING RECAPS Urban Land > Planning & Design > ULX: Ten Affordable Housing Projects ULX: Ten Affordable Housing Projects Recent Trending Most Shared By Ron Nyren As part of responsible property investing, building owners July 9, 2018 Text Size: A A A are poised to benefit from benchmarking their energy Print Email Share Facebook LinkedIn Twitter per… https://t.co/9iKnJYPiuD 1 hour ago RT @ColgateCCS: We've partnered with @UrbanLandInst High-quality design and low-cost housing are not incompatible. The gray housing projects of the past are to provide an online course for Colgate students giving way to more artful buildings with landscaped courtyards and rooftop gardens, colorful facades, and interested in learning about commercia… varied forms. Housing authorities and developers alike are aware of the importance of providing access to 20 hours ago natural light, not just for individual units and communal spaces, but also for corridors. Spaces for gathering RT @HistColumbia: We're excited to host the and interacting are crucial for building a sense of community, as are connections to the surrounding urban @UrbanLandInst Coffee & Conversations series at Seibels House on 10/23 - learn more and registe… fabric. 20 hours ago The following ten projects—all built during the past five years—showcase a variety of design strategies that make inventive use of their project budgets. They include LGBT-friendly housing for seniors, a textile mill View on Twitter adapted to serve as apartments, supportive housing for military veterans and the formerly homeless, and historic cottages restored after Hurricane Katrina.
    [Show full text]
  • Manhattan's Oldest Street: Part 3
    November 10, 2014 Manhattan's Oldest Street: Part 3 As the Bowery continues to morph (most recently, the sale of a strip of lighting stores from 134-142 Bowery, above, portends redevelopment), Eastern Consolidated's Adelaide Polsinelli advises: Don't cry for old New York. The Bowery has been reinventing itself since Native Americans used it as a foot path to Canada. These lighting stores started as Federal-style rowhouses, and now, perhaps, the site is fated to become residential again. The inevitability of change is apparent in northern Chinatown's previous role as an entertainment district for monied Manhattanites and then the middle class, says New York Historical Tours' Kevin Draper. Take 104 and 106 Bowery, above. The area was a precedent to Lincoln Center until the Gilded Age chased the rich folk into their parlors and ballrooms. Then, the middle class took over. A theater in the basement of 104 and 106 has in its history hosted the first performance of Uncle Tom's Cabin and the first Yiddish theater in the US (which led to vaudeville, which spawned Broadway). Now, the buildings are a spa and a mobile phone store. A below-grade theater at the Crystal Hotel at 165 and 167 Bowery hosted the first-ever amateur night. Fifty years before the Apollo opened, a stagehand here would pull people off the stage with a cane, giving birth to the phrase “give him the hook.” Now, retail on the street is elevating, says Eastern Consolidated's Carlos Olson. SoHo- level rents are crossing Houston southward, like Anthropologie's more than $200/SF lease in 250 Bowery, a record south of Houston.
    [Show full text]
  • Peter Coffin
    PETER COFFIN Born 1972 Berkeley, California Lives and works in New York SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2007 Tree Pants, The Historical Society of New York Herald Street, London 2005 Hello Headspace, Galleria Fonti, Naples, Italy New Work, Living Room D Lyx Gallery, Malmo, Sweden Absinthe Drinker, The Wrong Gallery, New York, curated by Ali Subotnick / Lisa Ivorian Gray 2004 It Chooses You, Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York 2002 Perfect If On, Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York 1995 Peter Coffin: New Work, University of California, Davis Art Gallery, Davis Museum EXHIBITIONS 2005 When Interwoven Echoes Drip into a Hybrid Body - an Exhibition about Sound, Performance and Sculpture, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich. Greater New York, P.S.1/MoMA, Long Island City, New York 2004 Natural Habitat, The Paine Art Center, Osh Kosh, Wisconsin Beating About The Bush, South London Gallery, London Collection (or, How I Spent a Year), P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, New York (curated by Bob Nickas) 2001 B-Hotel, curated by Klaus Biesenbach, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, New York GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2006 The Impossible Landscape, University Gallery, University of Massachusetts (curated by Mark Godfrey and Jodie Vicenta Jacobson) WWW.SAATCHIGALLERY.COM PETER COFFIN Sculpture Park, Frieze Art Fair, London (exhibited: Untitled (Treepants)) Shape Without Form, Shade Without Colour, Paralysed Force, Gesture Without Motion, Galleria Francesca Kaufmann Gallery, Milan Dice Thrown (Will Never Annul Chance), Bellwether Gallery, , Curated by Joao Ribas and Becky Smith Strange Powers, curated by Laura Hoptman and Peter Eleey, Creative Time, Yes Bruce Nauman, Zwirner & Wirth, N.Y.
    [Show full text]
  • Northwest Community Land Trust “SHARED EQUITY HOMEOWNERSHIP in the AFFORDABLE HOUSING CONTINUUM”
    SHARED EQUITY HOMEOWNERSHIP IN THE AFFORDABLE HOUSING CONTINUUM STABILITY – EQUITY – ECONOMIC GROWTH Northwest Community Land Trust Coalition CONTENTS Northwest residents impacted by rising housing costs . 2 Building a region everyone can afford . 3 Shared equity homeownership: the community land trust model . 4 A bridge to traditional homeownership . 5 Affordable homeownership plays a key role in the housing continuum . 6 Stability and economic growth for families and communities . 7 Homeowner stories . 9 NORTHWEST RESIDENTS IMPACTED BY RISING HOUSING COSTS Advocates Urge Oregon to Act to Ease Housing Crisis Public News Service April 11, 2017 Long wait lists for affordable housing in IF Can Olympia Solve Seattle’s Housing Crisis? Post Register Caroline Halter, Washington March 23, 2017 State Wire, February 19, 2016 Housing Crisis Mayors Cry Out for Affordable “Ugly And Getting Uglier” Housing in County Matt Rosenberg, Lens, Gary Bégin, Lake Chelan Mirror June 6, 2016 September 7, 2016 The Hidden Reason Report Looks at Lack of Affordable Housing Behind Seattle’s Patty Hastings, The Columbian, June 2, 2016 Skyrocketing Housing Costs Kathleen Richards, Affordable Housing Leaders ‘Fired Up’ The Stranger, Over Economic Crisis July 29, 2015 Flathead Beacon May 28, 2016 page 1 page 2 BUILDING A REGION SHARED EQUITY HOMEOWNERSHIP: EVERYONE CAN AFFORD THE COMMUNITY LAND TRUST MODEL Homeownership Benefits People, Homeownership organizations often Shared equity through a community land In shared equity homeownership, Jobs and Economic Growth have significant waiting lists and a 1:10 trust is a model of affordable homeownership homeowners are an essential part of A safe place to live is an essential start .
    [Show full text]
  • Manhattan the Historic Districts Council Is New York’S Citywide Advocate for Historic Buildings and Neighborhoods
    A Guide to Historic New York City Neighborhoods B owe ry Manhattan The Historic Districts Council is New York’s citywide advocate for historic buildings and neighborhoods. The Six to Celebrate program annually identifies six historic New York City neighborhoods that merit preservation as priorities for HDC’s advocacy and consultation over a yearlong period. The six, chosen from applications submitted by community organizations, are selected on the basis of the architectural and historic merit of the area, the level of threat to the neighborhood, the strength and willingness of the local advocates, and the potential for HDC’s preservation support to be meaningful. HDC works with these neighborhood partners to set and reach pres- ervation goals through strategic planning, advocacy, outreach, programs and publicity. The core belief of the Historic Districts Council is that preservation and enhancement of New York City’s historic resources—its neighborhoods, buildings, parks and public spaces—are central to the continued success of the city. The Historic Districts Council works to ensure the preservation of these resources and uphold the New York City Landmarks Law and to further the preservation ethic. This mission is accomplished through ongoing programs of assistance to more than 500 community and neighborhood groups and through public-policy initiatives, publications, educational outreach and sponsorship of community events. Six to Celebrate is generously supported by The New York Community Trust and HDC’s Six to Celebrate Committee. Additional support for the Six to Celebrate Tours is provided by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and New York City Councilmembers Inez Dickens, Daniel Garodnick, Vincent Gentile, Stephen Levin and Rosie Mendez.
    [Show full text]
  • Accomplishments More Than 30 Years of Innovative Programs That Transform People, Buildings and Communities
    Accomplishments Housing Breaking Ground operates over 4,000 units of permanent and transitional housing in New York City, Connecticut, and upstate New York. Our network of well-designed, affordable apartments — linked to the services people need to maintain their housing, restore their health, and regain their economic independence — has enabled more than 15,000 individuals More than 30 Years of Innovative to overcome or avoid homelessness. Programs That Transform People, Cost Effectiveness Buildings and Communities It surprises many to learn that supportive housing is less Since 1990, Breaking Ground has pioneered the most expensive than leaving homeless men and women to suffer successful and effective strategy to address chronic on the streets. But the truth is, not only is living on the streets homelessness. Our combination of street outreach and dangerous and detrimental to a person’s health, it often leads transitional and permanent supportive housing has become to high consumption of costly public services. the gold standard, replicated worldwide. Cost category Average annual costs Average annual cost We are also committed to preventing homelessness among incurred by a person incurred by a person living in living on the street supportive housing at-risk populations. We have always included affordable State psychiatric $19,418 $750 apartments for low-income working New Yorkers in our developments; in 2020, the average annual income for this Single adult shelter $5,591 $164 group of residents was just $25,547. Family shelter $1,502 $10 Jail $1,708 $410 Whether they have transitioned from life on Medicaid $19,069 $18,134 the streets or escaped the struggle to find an affordable apartment, thousands upon Cash assistance $2,375 $2,094 Food stamps $1357 $1,793 thousands of New Yorkers have found a home Supportive Housing $0 $17,566 with Breaking Ground.
    [Show full text]
  • Single Room Occupancy Hotels, Historic Preservation
    SINGLE ROOM OCCUPANCY HOTELS, HISTORIC PRESERVATION, AND THE FATE OF SEATTLE’S SKID ROAD A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Jonathon Arthur Rusch January 2013 © 2013 Jonathon Arthur Rusch ABSTRACT This thesis concerns the social history of the Skid Road/Pioneer Square—central Seattle’s oldest neighborhood and the city’s historic laborer’s district—as well as the implications of historic preservation activities there during the 1960s and 1970s. The gradual rehabilitation of the Skid Road’s built environment as a middle‐class destination neighborhood signaled a significant break from its down‐and‐out history and urban “grit,” characterized by the presence of workingman’s hotels and poor, near‐homeless residents. The thesis describes and contextualizes this type of cheap lodging house (more recently known as single room occupancy hotel, or SRO) and surrounding laborers’ district during the late 19th and early 20th centuries: the Skid Road was a necessary space for Seattle’s temporary residents, although largely opposed to bourgeois social norms. SROs continued to characterize the Skid Road as it experienced disinvestment in subsequent decades, and they contributed to discourses of the neighborhood as trashed urban space. The thesis describes the Skid Road’s early preservation and gentrification, which sped the elimination of the existing cheap hotel stock. The discussion subsequently explores the tension between two distinct but at times overlapping ideologies regarding the neighborhood’s authentic character: that the Skid Road was defined by its architectural character, and that it was defined by a social environment fostered by its historic workingman’s hotels.
    [Show full text]
  • Cottage”? Find 9 Synonyms and 30 Related Words for “Cottage” in This Overview
    Need another word that means the same as “cottage”? Find 9 synonyms and 30 related words for “cottage” in this overview. Table Of Contents: Cottage as a Noun Definitions of "Cottage" as a noun Synonyms of "Cottage" as a noun (9 Words) Usage Examples of "Cottage" as a noun Associations of "Cottage" (30 Words) The synonyms of “Cottage” are: bungalow, small house, house, villa, lodge, chalet, cabin, shack, shanty Cottage as a Noun Definitions of "Cottage" as a noun According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “cottage” as a noun can have the following definitions: (in the context of casual homosexual encounters) a public toilet. A small house, typically one in the country. A small house with a single story. A simple house forming part of a farm, used by a worker. GrammarTOP.com Synonyms of "Cottage" as a noun (9 Words) bungalow (in SE Asia) a large detached house with more than one storey. A small house built of wood; usually in a wooded area. cabin Animals are not allowed in the cabin of the aircraft. A small cabin or house used by holidaymakers, forming a unit within a chalet holiday complex. The management of a gambling house or casino. house A house prefect. A North American Indian tent or wigwam. lodge A hunting lodge. shack A roughly built hut or cabin. GrammarTOP.com shanty Small crude shelter used as a dwelling. small house The slender part of the back. A rented holiday home abroad. villa Madison Villas. Usage Examples of "Cottage" as a noun A holiday cottage. Farm cottages.
    [Show full text]
  • Development of Public and Private Support for Homeless People in Japan After the 1990S: Focus on Housing Support
    Development of Public and Private Support for Homeless People in Japan after the 1990s: Focus on Housing Support Akiko Nakajima, Michiko Bando, Hajime Osaki, Rebecca Tanaka Akiko Nakajima, Professor of Housing, Wayo Women’s University 2-3-1 Konodai, Ichikawa, Chiba Prefecture, Japan 272-8533 Tel (81)47-371-2186, Fax (81)47-371-1336, email: [email protected] Michiko Bando National Institute of Public Health Hajime Osaki Architect Office Takumiya Architects, Ltd. Rebecca Tanaka Wayo Women’s University Introduction In Japan, the term homeless officially means rough sleeper. It includes people, primarily men, who sleep in parks, train stations, under railroad viaducts, on the streets, and beside rivers—in essence, people without a house or shelter to live in. Since the 1990’s when Japan began experiencing recessionary conditions, rough sleepers have been seen not only in big cities but also in medium-sized and small cities. The number of rough sleepers hit 25,000 in 2003, according to a survey that was conducted in all municipalities in Japan. The survey was based on the Homeless Self-reliance Support Law (2002). Throughout this research report, the term rough sleeper will be used to define people without housing who live on the street, whereas people who stay in public shelters, emergency centers, or transitional housing facilities will be defined as the homeless. The recession is not the only cause of increasing rough sleepers, however. Three other factors have contributed to the increase of this type of homelessness in a country that for centuries had virtually none. First, in the background lie the increasingly unstable relations between employers and employees that resulted when Japan switched to neoliberalism policies, like many other developed nations.
    [Show full text]