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{{short description|Public housing development in Chicago, Illinois, United States}} | |||
⚫ | {{Infobox |
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⚫ | {{see also|Alcoholic Beverage Labeling Act}} | ||
|building name = ABLA | |||
{{More citations needed|date=September 2014}} | |||
|image = | |||
⚫ | {{Infobox housing project | ||
|caption = | |||
| |
|building name = ABLA Homes | ||
| |
|image = ABLA demolition.jpg | ||
|caption = Photograph of one of the low-rise ABLA Homes (foreground) with the demolition of an ABLA high-rise (background), in 2007. | |||
|status = Mostly demolished | |||
|location = Bordered by Cabrini St. (North), Ashland Ave. (West), 15th St. (South), Blue Island Ave. (East)<br>], ],<br>{{USA}} | |||
|constructed = 1938-1961 | |||
|coordinates ={{Coord|41|51|58|N|87|39|35|W|display=inline}} | |||
|demolished = | |||
|status = 330 Units Remaining<br> <small>(Brooks Rowhouses; Renovated)</small> <ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.thecha.org/residents/public-housing/find-public-housing/abla/brooks-homes|title=Chicago Housing Authority (ABLA/Brooks Homes)}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | |governing body = ] | ||
|constructed = 1938–39; Addams Homes<br>1942–43; Brooks Homes<br>1960–62; Brooks Extensions<br>1951; Loomis Courts<br>1952–55; Abbott Homes | |||
|demolished =2002–07<br> <small>(Addams, Abbott, Loomis, and the Brooks Extensions)</small> | |||
⚫ | |governing body = ] | ||
|famous residents = | |famous residents = | ||
}} | }} | ||
⚫ | '''ABLA Homes''' ('''Jane Addams Homes''', '''Robert Brooks Homes''',''' Loomis Courts''', and '''Grace Abbott Homes''') was a ] (CHA) ] development that comprised four separate public ] on the ] of ], ]. The name "ABLA" was an acronym for the names of the four different housing developments that together constituted one large site: Addams, Brooks (including the Robert Brooks Extension), Loomis, and Abbott, totaling 3,596 units. It spanned from Cabrini Street on the north end to 15th Street on the south end, and from ] on the east end to ] on the west end. Most of the ABLA Homes have been demolished for the development of Roosevelt Square, a new mixed-income community by ], with the renovated Brooks Homes being the only part left. For most of its existence, the ABLAs held more than 17,000 residents (though only 8,500 were officially on the lease), giving it the second largest population in the CHA. It was second only to the ] and ] in land area and had a higher occupancy than Cabrini–Green. | ||
⚫ | {{ |
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== History == | |||
⚫ | '''ABLA''' was a ] development |
||
⚫ | === Jane Addams and Grace Abbott Homes === | ||
== Homes in ABLA == | |||
⚫ | ===Jane Addams Homes=== | ||
The ] Homes (One of the first housing projects) are made up of 32 4- 3, and 2-story buildings, and were built in ] by ]'s ] Program. They were originally built to last 60 years. {{Fact|date=February 2007}} They were famous for their animal sculptures in the court area. The majority of the buildings have been demolished. | |||
The ] Homes (one of the first three public housing projects in Chicago) consisted of 32 buildings of 2, 3, and 4 stories (987 units) built in 1938 by ]'s ] Program. They housed hundreds of families over several decades until they were vacated in 2002.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://livingnewdeal.berkeley.edu/projects/jane-addams-homes-chicago-il/ |title=Jane Addams Homes - Chicago IL | Living New Deal |accessdate=2013-10-13 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131016085606/http://livingnewdeal.berkeley.edu/projects/jane-addams-homes-chicago-il/ |archivedate=2013-10-16 }}</ref> They were famous for their animal sculptures in the court area. | |||
===Robert Brooks Homes=== | |||
Built in ], the original 800 rowhouse units were recently reconstructed (completed in two phases between 1997 and 2000) The $45 million CHA-funded renovation reduced unit density per acre and increased unit sites, resulting in 330 units of public housing. | |||
The buildings have largely been demolished. The one remaining building at 1322-24 West Taylor Street is being incorporated into plans for a new National Public Housing Museum,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.publichousingmuseum.org/|title=Home|website=National Public Housing Museum}}</ref> as part of the International Sites of Conscience.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sitesofconscience.org/members/national-public-housing-museum/|title=National Public Housing Museum (USA) – Sites of Conscience|website=www.sitesofconscience.org}}</ref> Originally made up of 7 15-story buildings and 33 2-story rowhouse buildings (1,198 units), the ] Homes were built in 1955. In 2005, four of the high-rise buildings were demolished, and the rest were demolished by 2007. This property is planned to be redeveloped in Phases 3-6 of the new Roosevelt Square mixed-income community. | |||
===Loomis Courts=== | |||
Built in 1951, this 126-unit complex consists of 2 buildings of 7 stories each. It was built with City-State funds, not federal public housing funds. In 2005, the CHA started a 2-phase rehabilitation of the property that will result in all units being preserved as affordable rental housing. Rents will continue to be based on 30% of household income. | |||
=== |
=== Robert Brooks Homes and Extensions/Loomis Courts === | ||
Originally made up of 7 15-story buildings and 33 2-story rowhouse buildings, the ] Homes were built in ]. Although in 2005, 4 of the high-rise buildings were demolished, and the rest were demolished by 2007. This property is planned to be redeveloped in Phases 3-6 of the new Roosevelt Square mixed-income community. | |||
The Robert Brooks Homes were built in 1943 with 835 ] units and was rebuilt in two phases between 1997 and 2000. The renovations reduced the housing density, resulting in 330 housing units. In 2005, the site was repurposed and became part of a new mixed-income development called Roosevelt Square. | |||
===Robert Brooks Extension=== | |||
Built in ], this complex was made up of 3 16-story buildings. One building at 1239 S. Racine was demolished in 1998. The remaining 2 buildings were demolished in 2001. In 2005, Phase 1 of a new mixed-income development called Roosevelt Square was under construction on this site. | |||
The Robert Brooks extensions were built in 1961 and were made up of three 16-story buildings (450 units). One of the three buildings, Racine, was demolished in 1998. The remaining two buildings were demolished in 2001. | |||
== Crime situation == | |||
Like many other CHA projects, the ABLA homes were plagued by violence and poverty. | |||
The Loomis Courts were built in 1951, and the 126-unit complex consisted of two seven-story buildings. Instead of coming from public housing funds, project funding came from city and state funds. In 2005, the CHA started a 2-phase rehabilitation process that preserved the property as affordable rental housing. | |||
⚫ | |||
The ] street gang controlled most of the area through much of the late 1960s until the late 1980s. Around this time an internal war involving gang leaders in prison resulted in much of the area changing their allegiance from the original Gangster Disciples and becoming "New Breed," (following the lead of the jailed ABLA gang leader "Boonie Black"). At this point violence in the area doubled as many formerly allied gang members turned into bitter enemies and rivals in the increasingly lucrative drug trade. | |||
== Cross Ashland == | |||
Most of the ABLA homes and surrounding areas (], Wright Homes, and Circle Park), all followed suit and were now "New Breed" territory. The Gangster Disciples still maintained a stronghold in roughly half of the Jane Addams and unincorporated ] held court in one Robert Brooks building. At least fifty people were killed between 1988 and 1993, plus countless wounded, beaten and intimidated during this period. | |||
Just west of the ABLA's was a small neighborhood affectionately known as "'cross Ashland," named for the southern twang where many residents of the downtown and the projects pronounced its location. Bordered by Ashland Ave. to the east, Western Ave. on the west, the 15th Pl. train tracks to the south and Roosevelt Rd. on the north. This area originally went as far north as Polk, pre-dating the Medical district. Many black and Jewish people lived in the area through much of the 20th century until the late sixties when most Jews, Poles, and Italians moved away. Cross Ashland also extended east all the way to Halsted. Before the ABLA homes were constructed, many black people worked at the various rail yard companies at 15th St. until the companies all moved to foreign lands and the suburbs. They were proud to leave the oppressive south and work arduous hours to feed families and attend barbecues. In 2005, this community of roughly 10,000 in the fifties and 5,000 in the nineties was eventually brought to an end in a mass fire sale to land developers. Today the Cross Ashland area remains underdeveloped save for the new FBI building and University Police Station. | |||
=== Hostage Situation === | |||
{{Unreferencedsection|date=March 2008}} | |||
In the summer of 1993, following an argument with his infant child's mother, a resident of the ABLA homes took the child ] at knife point. An intense standoff ensued as police followed him throughout the projects, attempting to convince him to hand the child over and surrender. The man finally sat down on a curb on Roosevelt Road some eight hours after the start of the situation. Police moved in on the man who was still holding the bundled-up child at knife-point. Two officers lunged and held the man's arm while another officer freed the child. This particular crime was captured on video and has aired on many 'real-life camera event' styled programs. | |||
== Crime and violence == | |||
{{Unreferencedsection|date=March 2008}} | |||
In 1994, at the local ] restaurant at the corner of ] and ], a tourist entered the restroom after ordering lunch. There, she encountered two drug addicts preparing to inject themselves. She returned to the front counter and informed restaurant employees who ejected the addicts from the premises. Upon leaving some time later, the tourist was attacked by the addicts, with one of them stabbing her several times. The tourist died in the parking lot. | |||
The housing projects were plagued by street gangs, drugs, and violent crimes. Most notably, the ABLA development was controlled by factions of the ]. In mid-1986, break-ins by entry through bathroom medicine cabinets began occurring in the Abbott buildings. The bathrooms in the apartments at the end of each floor were separated by only two feet of crawl space. Space was generally created for plumbers and janitors to have easy access to the pipes in the buildings. | |||
⚫ | == Existing |
||
⚫ | ABLA once held |
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=== Ruth Mae McCoy === | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | The CHA's redevelopment plan for ABLA is named Roosevelt Square and includes 1,467 public housing units |
||
On April 22, 1987, 52-year-old Ruth Mae McCoy was murdered by a person or persons who entered her 11th floor Abbott apartment (1440 W. 13th St.) through her bathroom cabinet sometime between 8:50 PM and 9:05 PM. McCoy called ] at 8:45 that evening to report that someone in the apartment next door was coming through her bathroom cabinet. The 9-1-1 operator contacted the police, summarizing the situation as a "disturbance with a neighbor". The police did not arrive until after two more 9-1-1 calls came through between 8:50-9:04 PM about screaming and gunshots coming from McCoy's apartment. Police arrived around 9:10 PM, and after their knocks went unanswered, they attempted to enter the apartment using a key given to them by an attendant in the housing office, but left the premises when the key failed to work. The next evening, 9-1-1 received a call from McCoy's neighbor worried and concerned about her whereabouts, considering she had seen police at her door the night before and she still had not seen McCoy. Chicago Police and CHA security guards arrived back at McCoy's apartment. After the knocks and calls for McCoy went unanswered, officers suggested breaking the door down, but were cautioned not to by CHA security guards. The following evening, a CHA official arrived at McCoy's door with a carpenter who drilled the lock on the door. McCoy was found lying on her bedroom floor shot four times {{ndash}} in her left shoulder, left thigh, the right side of her abdomen, and right upper arm. Two men, Ted Turner, then aged 18, and John Honduras, 21, were charged with murder, home invasion, armed robbery, armed violence, and residential burglary. Witnesses claim that they saw the two men carrying McCoy's 19-inch color TV and rocking chair around the project in the early morning hours after her death. Due to lack of evidence, the charges against the two men were dropped after two years of the trial. The victim's daughter, Vernita McCoy, sued the Chicago Housing Authority for the cause of her mother's death in 1988.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Bogira|first1=Steve|title=They Came in Through the Bathroom Mirror: A Murder in the Projects|journal=Chicago Reader|date=4 September 1987|volume=16|issue=46|page=2|url=https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/they-came-in-through-the-bathroom-mirror/Content?oid=871084|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Bogira|first1=Steve|title=Cause of Death: What killed Ruthie Mae McCoy—A Bullet in the Chest, or Life in the Projects?|volume=19|issue=39|journal=Chicago Reader|date=12 July 1990|url=https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/cause-of-death/Content?oid=875995|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1987/06/10/2d-suspect-charged-in-slaying-robbery/|title=2d Suspect Charged In Slaying, Robbery|publisher=}}</ref> The murder may have partially inspired the idea for '']'', the horror film. <ref>{{cite tweet|number=1431018119850598414|user=Chicago_Reader|title=#FromtheArchives: When Ruthie Mae McCoy called 911 to report that someone was coming through the medicine cabinet o…<!-- full text of tweet that Twitter returned to the bot (excluding links) added by TweetCiteBot. This may be better truncated or may need expanding (TW limits responses to 140 characters) or case changes. --> |date=26 August 2021}}</ref> | |||
==The "Vill"== | |||
⚫ | The common nickname for the ABLA homes is "the village |
||
⚫ | == Existing conditions == | ||
Due to their proximity to downtown and the UIC Medical Center/University, the ABLAs can be seen in several films and television programs. | |||
⚫ | * The |
||
⚫ | ABLA once held over 17,000 residents but due to redevelopment, only 2,100 residents remain. Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Little Italy neighborhood (and inner city Chicago in general) underwent a significant period of gentrification resulting in almost all of the Chicago Housing Authority's projects being demolished or slated for redevelopment. The ] redevelopment of the general Maxwell Street neighborhood and the expansion of the south campus of ] also contributed to the end of ABLA. | ||
⚫ | * In the 1987 film |
||
⚫ | * In the 2001 film ], ] coaches a ragtag bunch of kids on an inner-city little league team. Almost half the film |
||
⚫ | == CHA Plan for Transformation == | ||
⚫ | * Several episodes of ], ] and ] have filmed scenes in and around the ABLA homes. | ||
⚫ | The CHA's redevelopment plan for ABLA is named Roosevelt Square and includes 1,467 public housing units, of which 329 units were completed in 2000 as part of a complete rehab of the Brooks Homes and 383 off-site CHA replacement units were newly constructed. Construction of the remaining 775 on-site mixed-income units at Roosevelt Square began in 2004. ABLA's new physical design includes traditional Chicago-style buildings including single family homes and six-flat structures. In June 2005, the ] reopened Fosco Park, a {{convert|57000|sqft|m2|adj=on}} community center which includes an indoor swimming pool, gymnasium, and a new daycare facility. A Jewel/Osco supermarket opened near ABLA in January 2002. The redevelopment plan also includes an integrated "campus" green space with Smyth School and Duncan YMCA. A new fire and police station was constructed near ABLA. | ||
⚫ | == The "vill" == | ||
⚫ | The common nickname for the ABLA homes is "the village", or "the vill". Due to their proximity to downtown and the UIC Medical Center/University, the ABLAs can be seen in several films and television programs: | ||
⚫ | * The 80s police drama '']'' was set at a police station located two blocks east of ABLA. Stories from the show often involved situations there. | ||
⚫ | * In the 1987 film ''Next Of Kin'' many scenes were filmed in and around ABLA, most notably one in which ] hides from his pursuers inside the Robert Brooks Extension and bribes a young child to misdirect them. | ||
⚫ | * In the 2001 film ], ] (who plays as Conor O'Neill) coaches a ragtag bunch of kids on an inner-city little league team. Almost half the film was shot at ABLA. | ||
⚫ | * Several episodes of ], '']'' and '']'' have filmed scenes in and around the ABLA homes. | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:ABLA Homes}} | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 15:23, 2 November 2024
Public housing development in Chicago, Illinois, United States See also: Alcoholic Beverage Labeling ActThis article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "ABLA Homes" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
ABLA Homes | |
---|---|
Photograph of one of the low-rise ABLA Homes (foreground) with the demolition of an ABLA high-rise (background), in 2007. | |
General information | |
Location | Bordered by Cabrini St. (North), Ashland Ave. (West), 15th St. (South), Blue Island Ave. (East) Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Coordinates | 41°51′58″N 87°39′35″W / 41.86611°N 87.65972°W / 41.86611; -87.65972 |
Status | 330 Units Remaining (Brooks Rowhouses; Renovated) |
Construction | |
Constructed | 1938–39; Addams Homes 1942–43; Brooks Homes 1960–62; Brooks Extensions 1951; Loomis Courts 1952–55; Abbott Homes |
Demolished | 2002–07 (Addams, Abbott, Loomis, and the Brooks Extensions) |
Other information | |
Governing body | Chicago Housing Authority |
ABLA Homes (Jane Addams Homes, Robert Brooks Homes, Loomis Courts, and Grace Abbott Homes) was a Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) public housing development that comprised four separate public housing projects on the Near-West Side of Chicago, Illinois. The name "ABLA" was an acronym for the names of the four different housing developments that together constituted one large site: Addams, Brooks (including the Robert Brooks Extension), Loomis, and Abbott, totaling 3,596 units. It spanned from Cabrini Street on the north end to 15th Street on the south end, and from Blue Island Avenue on the east end to Ashland Avenue on the west end. Most of the ABLA Homes have been demolished for the development of Roosevelt Square, a new mixed-income community by The Related Companies, with the renovated Brooks Homes being the only part left. For most of its existence, the ABLAs held more than 17,000 residents (though only 8,500 were officially on the lease), giving it the second largest population in the CHA. It was second only to the Robert Taylor Homes and Cabrini–Green in land area and had a higher occupancy than Cabrini–Green.
History
Jane Addams and Grace Abbott Homes
The Jane Addams Homes (one of the first three public housing projects in Chicago) consisted of 32 buildings of 2, 3, and 4 stories (987 units) built in 1938 by Franklin D. Roosevelt's PWA Program. They housed hundreds of families over several decades until they were vacated in 2002. They were famous for their animal sculptures in the court area.
The buildings have largely been demolished. The one remaining building at 1322-24 West Taylor Street is being incorporated into plans for a new National Public Housing Museum, as part of the International Sites of Conscience. Originally made up of 7 15-story buildings and 33 2-story rowhouse buildings (1,198 units), the Grace Abbott Homes were built in 1955. In 2005, four of the high-rise buildings were demolished, and the rest were demolished by 2007. This property is planned to be redeveloped in Phases 3-6 of the new Roosevelt Square mixed-income community.
Robert Brooks Homes and Extensions/Loomis Courts
The Robert Brooks Homes were built in 1943 with 835 rowhouse units and was rebuilt in two phases between 1997 and 2000. The renovations reduced the housing density, resulting in 330 housing units. In 2005, the site was repurposed and became part of a new mixed-income development called Roosevelt Square.
The Robert Brooks extensions were built in 1961 and were made up of three 16-story buildings (450 units). One of the three buildings, Racine, was demolished in 1998. The remaining two buildings were demolished in 2001.
The Loomis Courts were built in 1951, and the 126-unit complex consisted of two seven-story buildings. Instead of coming from public housing funds, project funding came from city and state funds. In 2005, the CHA started a 2-phase rehabilitation process that preserved the property as affordable rental housing.
Cross Ashland
Just west of the ABLA's was a small neighborhood affectionately known as "'cross Ashland," named for the southern twang where many residents of the downtown and the projects pronounced its location. Bordered by Ashland Ave. to the east, Western Ave. on the west, the 15th Pl. train tracks to the south and Roosevelt Rd. on the north. This area originally went as far north as Polk, pre-dating the Medical district. Many black and Jewish people lived in the area through much of the 20th century until the late sixties when most Jews, Poles, and Italians moved away. Cross Ashland also extended east all the way to Halsted. Before the ABLA homes were constructed, many black people worked at the various rail yard companies at 15th St. until the companies all moved to foreign lands and the suburbs. They were proud to leave the oppressive south and work arduous hours to feed families and attend barbecues. In 2005, this community of roughly 10,000 in the fifties and 5,000 in the nineties was eventually brought to an end in a mass fire sale to land developers. Today the Cross Ashland area remains underdeveloped save for the new FBI building and University Police Station.
Crime and violence
The housing projects were plagued by street gangs, drugs, and violent crimes. Most notably, the ABLA development was controlled by factions of the Black Gangster Disciples. In mid-1986, break-ins by entry through bathroom medicine cabinets began occurring in the Abbott buildings. The bathrooms in the apartments at the end of each floor were separated by only two feet of crawl space. Space was generally created for plumbers and janitors to have easy access to the pipes in the buildings.
Ruth Mae McCoy
On April 22, 1987, 52-year-old Ruth Mae McCoy was murdered by a person or persons who entered her 11th floor Abbott apartment (1440 W. 13th St.) through her bathroom cabinet sometime between 8:50 PM and 9:05 PM. McCoy called 9-1-1 at 8:45 that evening to report that someone in the apartment next door was coming through her bathroom cabinet. The 9-1-1 operator contacted the police, summarizing the situation as a "disturbance with a neighbor". The police did not arrive until after two more 9-1-1 calls came through between 8:50-9:04 PM about screaming and gunshots coming from McCoy's apartment. Police arrived around 9:10 PM, and after their knocks went unanswered, they attempted to enter the apartment using a key given to them by an attendant in the housing office, but left the premises when the key failed to work. The next evening, 9-1-1 received a call from McCoy's neighbor worried and concerned about her whereabouts, considering she had seen police at her door the night before and she still had not seen McCoy. Chicago Police and CHA security guards arrived back at McCoy's apartment. After the knocks and calls for McCoy went unanswered, officers suggested breaking the door down, but were cautioned not to by CHA security guards. The following evening, a CHA official arrived at McCoy's door with a carpenter who drilled the lock on the door. McCoy was found lying on her bedroom floor shot four times – in her left shoulder, left thigh, the right side of her abdomen, and right upper arm. Two men, Ted Turner, then aged 18, and John Honduras, 21, were charged with murder, home invasion, armed robbery, armed violence, and residential burglary. Witnesses claim that they saw the two men carrying McCoy's 19-inch color TV and rocking chair around the project in the early morning hours after her death. Due to lack of evidence, the charges against the two men were dropped after two years of the trial. The victim's daughter, Vernita McCoy, sued the Chicago Housing Authority for the cause of her mother's death in 1988. The murder may have partially inspired the idea for Candyman, the horror film.
Existing conditions
ABLA once held over 17,000 residents but due to redevelopment, only 2,100 residents remain. Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Little Italy neighborhood (and inner city Chicago in general) underwent a significant period of gentrification resulting in almost all of the Chicago Housing Authority's projects being demolished or slated for redevelopment. The University Village redevelopment of the general Maxwell Street neighborhood and the expansion of the south campus of University of Illinois at Chicago also contributed to the end of ABLA.
CHA Plan for Transformation
The CHA's redevelopment plan for ABLA is named Roosevelt Square and includes 1,467 public housing units, of which 329 units were completed in 2000 as part of a complete rehab of the Brooks Homes and 383 off-site CHA replacement units were newly constructed. Construction of the remaining 775 on-site mixed-income units at Roosevelt Square began in 2004. ABLA's new physical design includes traditional Chicago-style buildings including single family homes and six-flat structures. In June 2005, the Chicago Park District reopened Fosco Park, a 57,000-square-foot (5,300 m) community center which includes an indoor swimming pool, gymnasium, and a new daycare facility. A Jewel/Osco supermarket opened near ABLA in January 2002. The redevelopment plan also includes an integrated "campus" green space with Smyth School and Duncan YMCA. A new fire and police station was constructed near ABLA.
The "vill"
The common nickname for the ABLA homes is "the village", or "the vill". Due to their proximity to downtown and the UIC Medical Center/University, the ABLAs can be seen in several films and television programs:
- The 80s police drama Hill Street Blues was set at a police station located two blocks east of ABLA. Stories from the show often involved situations there.
- In the 1987 film Next Of Kin many scenes were filmed in and around ABLA, most notably one in which Patrick Swayze hides from his pursuers inside the Robert Brooks Extension and bribes a young child to misdirect them.
- In the 2001 film Hardball, Keanu Reeves (who plays as Conor O'Neill) coaches a ragtag bunch of kids on an inner-city little league team. Almost half the film was shot at ABLA.
- Several episodes of ER, Chicago Hope and Early Edition have filmed scenes in and around the ABLA homes.
References
- "Chicago Housing Authority (ABLA/Brooks Homes)".
- "Jane Addams Homes - Chicago IL | Living New Deal". Archived from the original on 2013-10-16. Retrieved 2013-10-13.
- "Home". National Public Housing Museum.
- "National Public Housing Museum (USA) – Sites of Conscience". www.sitesofconscience.org.
- Bogira, Steve (4 September 1987). "They Came in Through the Bathroom Mirror: A Murder in the Projects". Chicago Reader. 16 (46): 2.
- Bogira, Steve (12 July 1990). "Cause of Death: What killed Ruthie Mae McCoy—A Bullet in the Chest, or Life in the Projects?". Chicago Reader. 19 (39).
- "2d Suspect Charged In Slaying, Robbery".
- @Chicago_Reader (26 August 2021). "#FromtheArchives: When Ruthie Mae McCoy called 911 to report that someone was coming through the medicine cabinet o…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.