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Parkway Garden Homes

Parkway Garden Homes
Image Parkway Gardens.jpg
Parkway Garden Homes is located in Chicago
Parkway Garden Homes
Location 6330-6546 S. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Drive, Chicago, Illinois
Coordinates 41°46′36″N 87°36′59″W / 41.77667°N 87.61639°W / 41.77667; -87.61639Coordinates: 41°46′36″N 87°36′59″W / 41.77667°N 87.61639°W / 41.77667; -87.61639
Area less than one acre
Built 1950 (1950)-1955
Architect Henry K. Holsman
Architectural style Modern
NRHP Reference # 11000848
Added to NRHP November 22, 2011

Parkway Garden Homes is a low-income apartment complex located in the Greater Grand Crossing neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois. The complex was built from 1950 to 1955; architect Henry K. Holsman, who planned several of Chicago's affordable housing developments, designed the Modernist buildings. The apartment complex was the first to be cooperatively owned by Chicago's African-American residents, who experienced a housing shortage during the Second Great Migration due to segregation; early residents included former First Lady Michelle Obama. In recent years, however, the complex has become the center of one of Chicago's most violent blocks. The complex is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Parkway Garden Homes, built from 1950 to 1955, was the last of Henry K. Holsman's many housing development designs in Chicago. Holsman began designing low-income housing in Chicago in the 1910s, when an urban housing shortage developed after World War I. He worked on several of the Chicago Housing Authority's major housing projects in the 1930s; later in the decade, he began developing his own projects with funding from the Federal Housing Authority. From the 1940s onward, Holsman focused on designing residences for Chicago's African-American citizens, such as his Princeton Park community. While Chicago's African-American population boomed from 1920 to 1970 due to the Great Migrations, discriminatory housing policies forced African-Americans to live in the "Black Belt" section of the city's South Side, which did not have enough housing to meet demands. After completing the Winchester-Hood and Lunt-Lake Apartments on the North Side, Holsman began work on the similarly-designed Parkway Garden Homes as a return to the South Side African-American community. The complex replaced the White City Amusement Park, which had operated at the site since 1905. Holsman's firm went bankrupt before the complex opened due to unsound financial decisions, one of which resulted in Holsman's conviction for mail fraud.


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