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re: Which historic NOLA housing projects featured the worst living conditions?
Posted on 6/23/21 at 10:48 am to brewhan davey
Posted on 6/23/21 at 10:48 am to brewhan davey
quote:You know good and well they look nothing like that now and have been destroyed. If they can afford a place to live, they’re sure as hell not taking care of it.
the government housing persists in new construction multi-family houses
Posted on 6/23/21 at 10:51 am to tigergirl10
quote:
You know good and well they look nothing like that now and have been destroyed.
Slightly different architecture. Same old bullshite scheme that will produce the same result.
Posted on 6/23/21 at 11:16 am to tigergirl10
quote:
You know good and well they look nothing like that now and have been destroyed. If they can afford a place to live, they’re sure as hell not taking care of it.
You’re actually wrong about this. BW Cooper, St Thomas, and Magnolia are the ones I drive through or by very regularly and they all actually still look like they’re in good condition.
For now they’re still well maintained. But the construction on these is much much cheaper than those sturdy structural brick ones from the 40s-60s. These will deteriorate faster but as of now they actually look a lot nicer than many unsubsidized New Orleans neighborhoods
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