MODEL TENEMENTS AND THE WORKMEN’S/WORKINGMEN’S HOME

  In 1855, the AICP (Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor) built the first Workmen’s Home.  The AICP, founded in 1855, was a private organization which advocated for the poor in many ways including sponsoring several housing programs and welfare programs.  The Workmen’s Home was located on a midblock, six-lot site between Mott and Elizabeth Streets, north of Canal.(15)   In 1847, the first proposal for a model tenement-type building was designed.  The proposal was:

                        "To purchase, in some eligible part of the city, a plot of ground 200 feet square; to erect upon this a block of buildings four stories high, dividedin one direction into two parts by a passage twenty feet wide, and in the other direction into four parts, by three passages, twenty, ten, and twenty feet wide respectively; -- each of the eight buildings thus made, consists of three houses; --each house having a single entrance, with a hall, piazza in the rear for each story, and upon each floor two with sink, water closet, etc.—Thus there would be, in the four stories of each house 24 rooms for as many families; --and the block would accommodate as many families. "(16)
 
 

The first Workingman’s Home was built in 1855, designed by John W. Ritch and was occupied only by black families.  The Workmen’s Home housed 87 families in a 53-foot-wide, 188 foot-deep, six-story-high building facing a 22-foot-wide flagged alley like courtyard that extended through the block.  Toilets and water tapes were located in the public hall on each floor.  Shops occupied the ground floor and two rooms were reserved on the sixth floor for social and religious meetings as well as occasional concerts. (17)
 In 1867, AICP sold the building to the trustees of the Five Points House of Industry for $100,000.  In addition to renaming it the "Workingmen’s Home", the new owners invested around $40,000 to refurbish the property to run it as a boardinghouse. (18)
 In 1872, trustees sold building for the same price they bought it for.  Poor management in addition to sloppy tenants led to the building being nicknamed the "Big Flat."  The building was demolished in 1888.


THE WORKMEN'S HOME (L)





Although model tenements were often successful, only a limited number of these experimental buildings were erected.  They were expensive to construct since the amenities included (such as plumbing, adequate lighting, ventilation, etc.) were so costly.  Companies that built model tenements often relied on private investors and never really profited off of the model tenements.  Model tenements unfortunately were just not as financially rewarding as "normal", low-cost tenements were.  Thus, the model tenements, while proved to be safer and more pleasurable, never made a significant change in the building of multiple family dwellings.

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