Freedom Land - Co-Op City The Northeast Bronx
‘Freedomland’: A New Book Explores the Story of Co-Op City
Freedomland
Co-Op City and the Story of New York
Annemarie H. Sammartino Three Hills/Cornell University Press
In Freedomland, Annemarie H. Sammartino, an Oberlin College history professor and a former resident of Co-Op City, reveals the rich and often contentious history of one of New York’s most famous development projects.
The massive Co-op City development, first announced in 1965, was born from the optimism of the Mitchell-Lama housing program, New York State’s push to provide its residents with affordable housing.
It is quintessential ’60s architecture. One reason it is often maligned is its stark modernist arrangement, the very anti-Jane Jacobs tower-in-the-park style more frequently seen in public housing.
Sammartino reveals those criticisms were lobbed at the development from the very start. She quotes a Columbia architecture professor, who believed “Co-Op City’s architectural banality rendered it an illegitimate ‘negation of the ideals of the great society.’ “
Co-op City's 15,372 residential units are composed of 35 high-rise buildings and seven clusters of townhouses, making it the largest residential development in the United States.[4] It sits on 320 acres (1.3 km2), though only 20% of the land was developed, leaving many green spaces. The apartment buildings range from 24 to 33 floors. There are four types of buildings: 10 Triple Core (26 stories high with 500 apartment units per building), 10 chevron (24 stories, 414 units), 15 tower (33 stories, 384 units), and 236 town houses. The townhouses are three stories high and have a separate garden apartment and upper duplex apartment.[5]
This "city within a city" also has eight parking garages, three shopping centers, a 25-acre (100,000 m2) educational park, including a high school, two middle schools, and three grade schools. More than 40 offices are rented by doctors, lawyers, and other professionals, and there are 15 houses of worship. Spread throughout the community are six nursery schools and day care centers, four basketball courts, and five baseball diamonds. The adjacent Bay Plaza Shopping Center has a 13-screen multiplex movie theater, department stores, and a supermarket.
The development was built on landfill, and the original marshland still surrounds it. The building foundations extend down to bedrock through 50,000 pilings,[6] but the land surrounding Co-op's structures settles and sinks a fraction of an inch each year, creating cracks in sidewalks and entrances to buildings.[7]
Street names[edit]
Most streets in the community are named after notable historical personalities. Generally, streets in section one begin with the letter "D", section two begins with the letter "C", section three with the letter "A", section four with the letter "B" and section five with the letter "E".[8]
- Adler Place – named for archaeologist Cyrus Adler[8]: 16
- Alcott Place – named for author Louisa May Alcott, it is located directly above the former path of Rattlesnake Brook, which originated in Edenwald[8]: 17
- Aldrich Street – named for author Thomas Bailey Aldrich[8]: 17
- Asch Loop – named for author Sholem Asch[8]: 22
- Bellamy Loop – named for writer Edward Bellamy, it was located on the eastern edge of Pinckney's Meadow and located on the path of Rattlesnake Brook before becoming part of Freedomland[8]: 31
- Benchley Place – named for writer Robert Benchley[8]: 31
- Broun Place – named for sportswriter Heywood Broun[8]: 41
- Carver Loop – named for inventor George Washington Carver, it was formerly swampland and a tidal creek, not part of Freedomland[8]: 48
- Casals Place – named for conductor Pablo Casals, it was formerly swampland and not part of Freedomland[8]: 48
- Cooper Place – named for author James Fenimore Cooper, it was formerly a navigable tidal creek[8]: 59
- Darrow Place – named for lawyer Clarence Darrow[8]: 66
- Debs Place – named for socialist Eugene V. Debs[8]: 67
- Defoe Place – named for author Daniel Defoe[8]: 67
- De Kruif Place – named for microbiologist Paul de Kruif[8]: 68
- Donizetti Place – named for composer Gaetano Donizetti, it was a mill lane for 250 years before Co-op City was built[8]: 72
- Dreiser Loop – named for journalist Theodore Dreiser, it was part of the parking lot for Freedomland and located on the path of Rattlesnake Brook[8]: 74
- Earhart Lane – named for aviator Amelia Earhart, it was formerly occupied by barges and frame houses[8]: 76
- Einstein Loop – named for physicist Albert Einstein, it is the site of Givans and Barrow Creeks, on what was formerly the 14-acre Rose Island[8]: 97
- Elgar Place – named for composer Edward Elgar, it is the site of Givans Creek[8]: 98
- Erdman Place – named for poet Loula Grace Erdman, it is the site of Givans Creek[8]: 100
- Erskine Place – named for educator, author, pianist, and composer John Erskine[8]: 100
Other streets include:
- Bartow Avenue – named after Reverend John Bartow who served as rector of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Westchester Square, and whose son later owned land in Pelham Bay Park[8]: 27
- Baychester Avenue – originally called South 18th Avenue and Comfort Avenue, named after the Baychester real estate venture of the 1890s[8]: 28
- Hutchinson River Parkway – named for the Hutchinson River, which is named for Anne Hutchinson[9]
- Hunter Avenue
History
Previous land use
Development
Financing
Management
Number of rooms | Minimum residents | Maximum residents | Sales price | Monthly maintenance payment | Minimum annual income (age 18–61) | Minimum annual income (age 62+) | Maximum annual income (1–3 residents) | Maximum annual income (4+ residents) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | 1 | 2 | $22,500 | $751 | $26,778 | $23,093 | $72,964 | — |
3.5 | 1 | 2 | $26,250 | $876 | $31,137 | $26,971 | $83,681 | — |
4 | 1 | 2 | $30,000 | $1002 | $35,523 | $30,490 | $96,423 | — |
4.5 | 2 | 4 | $33,750 | $1,128 | $40,026 | $34,659 | $107,768 | $116,388 |
5 | 2 | 4 | $37,750 | $1,251 | $42,764 | $38,487 | $112,939 | $127,884 |
6 | 4 | 6 | $45,000 | $1,504 | $53,317 | $- | $135,030 | $154,857 |
6.5 | 4 | 6 | $48,750 | $1,618 | $57,806 | $50,053 | $145,410 | $167,225 |
Co-op City is located within ZIP Code 10475.[57] The United States Postal Service operates three post offices in Co-op City:
The New York City Department of Education operates the following public schools in Co-op City:[69]
- PS 153 Helen Keller (grades PK–5)[70]
- PS 160 Walt Disney (grades PK–5)[71]
- PS 176 (grades PK–10)[72]
- PS 178 Dr Selman Waksman (grades K–5)[73]
- MS 180 Dr Daniel Hale Williams (grades 6–8)[74]
- IS 181 Pablo Casals (grades 6–8)[75]
- Harry S Truman High School (grades 9–12)[76]
- Bronx Health Sciences High School (grades 9–12)[77]
Transportation
Co-op City is served by several MTA Regional Bus Operations routes. (Note that sections 1-2-3-4-5 corresponds to Dreiser, Carver, Bellamy, Asch, and Einstein Loops, respectively; buses pull into Asch and Dreiser Loops directly.)[79]
- Bx5: to Bay Plaza Shopping Center or Simpson Street station (2 and 5 trains) (via Crosby Avenue, Bruckner Boulevard, and Story Avenue; serves Bay Plaza weekends only)
- Bx12: to Bay Plaza Shopping Center to University Heights (via Fordham Road and Pelham Parkway)
- Bx12 SBS: to Bay Plaza Shopping Center or Inwood–207th Street station (A train) (via Fordham Road and Pelham Parkway)
- Bx23: to Pelham Bay Park station (6 and <6> trains) (loop via sections 1-2-3-4-5)
- Bx25: to Bay Plaza Shopping Center or Bedford Park (via sections 4-5, Allerton Avenue)
- Bx26: to Earhart Lane or Bedford Park (via sections 1-2-3, Allerton Avenue)
- Bx28: to Earhart Lane or Fordham Center (via sections 1-2-3, Gun Hill Road)
- Bx30: to Earhart Lane or Pelham Parkway station (2 and 5 trains) (via sections 2-1-4-5, Boston Road)
- Bx38: to Bay Plaza Shopping Center or Norwood–205th Street station (D train) (via sections 4-5, Gun Hill Road)
- Q50: to Earhart Lane or Flushing–Main Street station (7 and <7> trains) (via sections 2-3-5, Bronx–Whitestone Bridge; serves Co-op City rush hours only)
- BxM7: express to Dreiser Loop or Midtown Manhattan (via sections 1-2-3-4-5, Bruckner Expressway, Fifth Avenue/Madison Avenue)
Currently, there are no subway or Metro-North commuter rail stations in Co-op City (a plan to extend the IRT Pelham Line to Co-op City as part of the 1968 Program for Action ran out of money[80]). However, as part of the Penn Station Access project to extend Metro-North service to Pennsylvania Station, the MTA plans to build the Co-op City station, an idea that has been proposed since the 1970s.[81]
Notable residents
- Brian Ash (born 1974), screenwriter/producer (resided in Co-op City from 1974 to 1993)[citation needed]
- Jamaal Bailey, politician[82]
- Earl Battey (1935–2003), former baseball player with the Chicago White Sox and Washington Senators (later renamed the Minnesota Twins).[83]
- David Berkowitz (born 1953), "Son of Sam" Killer (resided in Co-op City from 1968 to 1971)[84]
- Big Tigger (born 1972), radio and television personality[85]
- Kurtis Blow (born 1959), old school hip hop pioneer (resided in the Broun Place Townhouses during the mid-1980s)[86]
- Chris Canty (born 1982), professional football player for the New York Giants[87]
- Eddie Carmel (1936–1972), entertainer, known as “The Jewish Giant”, his claimed height of 9 feet made him an instant celebrity with traveling circuses. At the time of his death in 1972, he resided with his parents at 100 Elgar Place.[88]
- Christopher Scott Cherot (born 1967), screenwriter/director (resided in Co-op City from 1970 to 1981)[89]
- Cormega (born 1970), rapper[90]
- Eliot Engel (born 1947), United States Congressman who represented New York's 17th congressional district.[91]
- Frank Andre Guridy (born 1971), historian, author, and Professor of History at Columbia University.[92]
- Stan Jefferson (born 1962), professional baseball outfielder from 1983 to 1991.[93]
- Queen Latifah (born 1970), actress and rapper (resided in Co-op City from 1980 to 1984)[86]
- Miles Marshall Lewis (born 1970), African-American author (resided in Co-op City from 1974 to 1996)[94]
- Tamika Mallory (born 1980), activist[95]
- Melina Matsoukas (born 1981), music video, film, commercial, and television director.[96]
- Mwalim (born 1968), performing artist, writer, and professor of English at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth[97]
- Sean Nelson (born 1980), actor
- Jourdana Phillips (born 1990), model.[citation needed]
- Richard Price (born 1949), novelist and screenwriter.[98]
- Sally Regenhard (born 1946), mother of firefighter Christian Regenhard, and activist for families of the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks.[99]
- Christopher Rose (born 1957), professor of engineering and associate dean of faculty at Brown University[100]
- Tricia Rose (born 1962), academic, scholar of hip hop; Chancellor's Professor of Africana Studies, Brown University[100]
- Larry Seabrook (born 1951), former New York City Councilman[101]
- Sonia Sotomayor (born 1954), Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court[102][103]
- Rod Strickland (born 1966), former NBA basketball player[104]
- Ron Suno (born 2000), rapper.[105]
- Kenneth P. Thompson (1966-2016), former District Attorney for Kings County[106]
Queen Latifah
Sonia Sotomayor
See also
- Community Home Entertainment
- Cooperative Village
- LeFrak City
- Mitchell-Lama Housing Program
- Park La Brea, Los Angeles
- Parkchester, Bronx
- Parkfairfax, Virginia
- Parkmerced, San Francisco
- Penn South
- Riverton Houses
- Rochdale Village, Queens
- Starrett City, Brooklyn
- Stuyvesant Town–Peter Cooper Village
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- ^ Smith, Danyel. "Her Own Space Melina Matsoukas — Grammy-winning director for Beyoncé and Rihanna — makes her Hollywood feature debut with the kind of story Hollywood has overlooked." Archived July 12, 2022, at the Wayback Machine, California magazine, November 18, 2019. Accessed July 12, 2022. "Young Matsoukas lived in the Bronx’s 4,000-apartment Co-op City, a middle-income housing development, with her mother, an Afro-Cuban and Jamaican math teacher, and her father, a Greek and Jewish construction worker (her grandmother lives in the complex to this day)."
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- ^ Vanderbilt, Tom. "City Lore; Stagecoach Wreck Injures 10 in Bronx" Archived January 28, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, September 1, 2002. Accessed September 28, 2017. "After a few years, the world's largest theme park, and New York's last, gave way to the world's largest housing development, Co-op City. Mr. Price, who joined the electrical workers' union, helped build it.... A year later, Mr. Price got an apartment in Co-op City: I wound up living in Freedomland, so to speak."
- ^ Gest, Emily. "9/11 SURVIVORS FEEL DUTY TO KIN Mission of remembrance a cornerstone of their lives" Archived June 30, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, New York Daily News, August 5, 2002. Accessed June 6, 2016. "ally Regenhard, of Co-op City in the Bronx, who lost her son Christian, a firefighter, has quit her two jobs at nursing homes to devote herself full-time to her passion - improving skyscraper safety."
- ^ ab Schwartzapfel, Beth. "It’s All About Love" Archived November 30, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Brown Alumni Magazine, July 22, 2009. Accessed July 12, 2022. "If you think scholarly research and hip-hop music don't go together, you don't know Tricia Rose '87 AM, '93 PhD.... In 1970, when Rose was nine, the family moved to Co-op City, a brand-new housing development in the northeast Bronx. Her brother Chris, five years her senior, remembers the move as 'a revelation.'"
- ^ "New York City Council: Larry Seabrook". Council.nyc.gov. Retrieved June 14, 2011.
- ^ My Beloved World, 2013 Knopf, Chapter 11
- ^ Sonia Sotomayor: At Last a Bronx Candidate! Archived June 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Concurring Opinions, date May 2009. Accessed June 17, 2009.
- ^ "Rod Strickland - Gaucho from 1978-1985".
- ^ "Get To Know Ron Suno and his latest project Swag Like Mike" Archived January 2, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, Kazi, June 19, 2020. Accessed July 12, 2022. "Born Keron Foriest in Co-op City, a cooperative housing development in the northeast section of the Bronx, Suno emerged last fall on the New York drill scene, when he dropped his first hit, 'Pinnochio.'"
- ^ Feuer, Alan. "For Brooklyn's District Attorney, Year One Is a Trial by Fire" Archived January 2, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, March 13, 2015. Accessed September 28, 2017. "He also noted that although he was raised in the Robert Wagner Houses, his mother, Clara, eventually moved the family to Co-op City in the Bronx, where they did not live in Section 5 — 'where the black folk live,' he said — but in Section 2, where he spent his teenage years as a bookworm and a paperboy for his neighbors, most of whom were Jewish."
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