40°44′52″N73°59′54″W / 40.74778°N 73.99833°W /40.74778; -73.99833
Penn South, officially known asMutual Redevelopment Houses and formerlyPenn Station South, is a limited-equity[1]housing cooperative development located betweenEighth andNinth Avenues andWest 23rd and29th Streets, in theChelsea neighborhood ofManhattan inNew York City. The complex has 2,820 units in ten 22-story buildings. Penn South is so named because of its location southwest ofNew York Penn Station.
Penn South was sponsored by theInternational Ladies' Garment Workers Union based on a cooperative model promoted by theUnited Housing Foundation.[1] The ILGWU first proposed aslum clearance project in Chelsea in early June 1956.[2] Later that month, the New York City government endorsed the Penn Station South project.[3] The New York City Committee on Slum Clearance recommended Penn Station South for federal funding in August 1956.[4] However, local residents opposed the development because its proposed site would displace an estimated 7,500 residents.[5] In response, in mid-1958, the Committee modified the plan so that two churches within the future development's site would be preserved.[6] Ultimately, four churches were saved,[7] including theChurch of the Holy Apostles, which later became a New York City Landmark[8] and aNational Register of Historic Places landmark.[9] The UHF's president,Abraham Kazan, later called the preservation a "mistake" because it had prevented Penn South from being developed earlier.[7]
The site of Penn Station South was eligible for federal funding under the Title I of theHousing Act of 1949. The site was slated for demolition in July 1959. Despite this announcement, one developer started renovating three tenement buildings three months before their scheduled demolition date, in the hopes that these buildings would also be granted exemptions from demolition.[10] In early June 1959, the federal government allocated $12 million toward the project.[11]
The ILGWU acquired title to the land that June 28 and immediately began relocating residents.[12] Residents who already lived on the land filed a lawsuit in an attempt to block the land sale.[13] Groups of residents also organizedpicket lines and filed affidavits that attested to the hardships caused due to their relocations.[14] In another act of protest, tenants living in the future Penn South site withheld rent payments to the ILGWU, their new landlord.[15] The relocation proceedings were tense: one attorney who represented the protesters received death threats in response to his involvements in the protests.[16] After Manhattan Borough PresidentHulan Jack received a report about "harrowing" relocations that were done in preparation for Penn Station South, MayorRobert F. Wagner Jr. instituted new rules for Title I relocations around the city.[17] Some former residents alleged that they had been relocated into tenements.[18] Jack created a Citizens Watchdog Committee to oversee the treatment of residents who were being relocated. However, the committee itself disagreed on whether tenants were being treated unfairly during the relocation process.[19] The committee was disbanded in December 1959 due to an inability to resolve these disagreements.[20]
Ultimately, the vast majority of residents moved peacefully. By October 1960, all 2,646 families who had lived on the site had been relocated; they had received bonuses of up to $500, as well as a guarantee of new housing.[21] In addition, as part of an agreement between the ILGWU and the site's residents, 600 of the families who had formerly occupied the site would be given housing in Penn South.[22]
Early on in the construction process, supporters of Penn South wanted to include "Chelsea" in the name, in order to better integrate it with the surrounding community.[23] The New York state government awarded $2.42 million toward the Penn South project in April 1960.[24] The construction of the development was funded by a 20-year, $23 million mortgage, to be repaid between 1962 and 1982 at a rate of 5.125%.[25] In May 1960, it was announced that the historicGrand Opera House on 23rd Street would be demolished to make way for Penn South.[26] The theater burned down in a fire the next month.[27]RKO Pictures later constructed a new theater called Chelsea West Cinemas in Penn South near the site of the old opera house,[28] now used by theSchool of Visual Arts as theSVA Theater.[29]
Construction was delayed in July 1961 by a month-long strike by concrete-mixing workers. By that time, the ILGWU had hoped to complete and sell half of the apartments in Penn South, but were only able to find tenants for a quarter of the apartments.[22]
A dedication ceremony was held on May 19, 1962. PresidentJohn F. Kennedy addressed the workers on the project, with former First LadyEleanor Roosevelt and New York GovernorNelson Rockefeller in attendance. Kennedy praised organized laborers for their work on the Penn South project, and cited the development as an example of what could be accomplished when laborers collaborated with public and private developers.[30][31] That October, some tenants were prevented from moving into their units due to a union dispute regarding sink installations.[32][33] TheCarver Federal Savings and Loan Association, an African-American-run bank, opened a branch in Penn South in 1963, marking the first time that an African-American-run bank had been allowed to operate in a non-African-American neighborhood in New York City.[34]
The opening of Penn Station South spurred new development andgentrification in the surrounding community. Despite the initial resistance to moving out, many of the site's former residents were given preference for the new housing. As of Penn South's 20th anniversary in 1983, about 600 of the site's original families had moved back into the complex. ANew York Times article published that year said that Penn South was "widely regarded as one of the best-run cooperatives in the state".[25] Penn South was composed mostly of elderly residents by 1990.[35] A community garden and a seniors' program opened in Penn South in 1986, and an exercise room and playground was opened in 2000. The co-op renovated its brick facades in 1997. It subsequently replaced its underground electrical infrastructure in 2003 and itsHVAC system in 2011.[36]
Building 7 of the complex was listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2016. Apartment 9J in the B portion of the building had been home to civil and gay rights activistBayard Rustin from 1962 until his death in 1987.[37]
Penn South contains 2,820 units in ten 22-story red-brick buildings numbered from 1 to 10.[41][42] The site is bounded counterclockwise from the west by Ninth Avenue, 23rd Street, Eighth Avenue, and 29th Street, and occupies an area of 36.44 acres (14.75 ha).[24] The buildings were designed byHerman Jessor.[41]
Each housing unit has between 2 and 6 rooms.[42] Penn South's desirability among prospective tenants has increased over the years: adjusted for inflation, the average cost of purchase was $650 per room in 1962, and it rose to $2,295 per room in 1983.[25] As of 2012, there were 6,000 names on a waiting list of prospective residents looking to purchase one of the units in the development.[42] In 2014, Penn South's management opened up a lottery system in which it randomly distributed some vacant apartments to applicants who met specified criteria.[43] Nearly 50,000 people applied for 1,200 vacant apartments.[44]
Although the residents of Penn South were generally lower- to middle-class, they were also known as a group that was "rich in spirit".[25][42] During the1975 New York City fiscal crisis, residents prepaid their rents six months in advance so the nearly bankrupt New York City government would be able to use the funds.[45] Additionally, Penn South was among the first cooperative developments in New York City to draw power from gas, at a time when most other developments paid four times as much money to consume power from oil-powered generators.[25] The possibility of Penn South generating its own power had been proposed as early as 1960, before the development had opened, due to disagreements with utility providerConsolidated Edison over electricity rates.[46] The co-op was providing much of its own power, heating, and air-cooling by 1986.[36]
Penn South is served by the M20 bus operating onSeventh Avenue (southbound) and Eighth Avenue (northbound), and by the M11 bus operating on Ninth Avenue (southbound) andTenth Avenue (northbound). TheM23 Select Bus Service route operates crosstown along 23rd Street just south of the complex.[47] The closestNew York City Subway station is the23rd Street station on theC and E trains at Eighth Avenue. Penn South is also situated one block east of theHigh Line elevated park and within less than 1 mile (1.6 km) ofPenn Station,Chelsea Market,Chelsea Piers, and theHudson River Park.[48] The northern section of Penn South is located across fromChelsea Park on Ninth Avenue between 27th and 28th Streets.[48] PS 33, a public school, is located just south of the park.[49]
During Penn South's planning, the United Housing Foundation faced opposing demands. The mostly low-income families who already lived on the site wanted Penn South to have lower rent rates so that they could continue living in the area. Simultaneously, another proposed UHF development inConey Island, Brooklyn, was being challenged by developerFred Trump, who promised to pay higher tax rates on the Coney Island site than the UHF would.[50]
To help keep Penn South affordable to those with limited incomes, New York City gave the development a 25-year tax abatement between 1961 and 1986. Taxes on properties in Penn South were levied at the same rates as on the older buildings they replaced.[25] After the tax abatement expired in 1986, the cooperative's shareholders voted for a 25-year phase-in of real-estate taxes, which was approved by the city'sBoard of Estimate.[36] A further adjustment was made when the development asked the city in 1999 for tax relief when the building boom in Chelsea caused the project's assessed value to skyrocket. The city responded in 2001 by allowing the development's taxes to be calculated based on the cooperative's income, as is done withMitchell-Lama housing. In return, the development must remain a limited-equity cooperative until 2022. Under the terms of agreements reached with the City of New York in 2002, and separately with theUnited States Department of Housing and Urban Development, Penn South's eligibility for tax abatements offered by Mitchell-Lama was extended to 2052.[36] Penn South shareholders voted in 2011 to extend its contract with the city until 2030; in return, the city government awarded the co-op more than $25 million to rehabilitate the complex's HVAC system.[36] In February 2017, the New York City Council extended Penn South's tax abatement to 2052, ninety years after the development's opening.[51]
Founded by a labor union in 1962, Penn South has 2,820 units scattered over six blocks, still charges rock-bottom prices and once was so left-leaning that resident Communists pilloried resident Socialists.... The complex, which was sponsored by the International Ladies' Garment Workers Union and is formally known as the Mutual Redevelopment Houses, is one of the last of a breed of New York co-ops built for the working class.... Some 6,000 people are on the now-closed waiting list, and if history is any indication, many will die before getting in.