This is an outstanding book that makes a significant contribution to both the literature on public housing and the literature on urban neighborhoods in the U.S. The weaving together, in a detailed but comprehensive manner, of the complete histories of these three projects and their surrounding neighborhoods is masterly. Even though the book contains a great amount of information, it is easy to read and remains interesting throughout. There is simply no other book like this.
-- Karen Franck, New Jersey Institute of Technology
This is an extraordinary work. I know of no one who has put such sustained scholarly effort and skill into an examination of the details of commonplace urban life, and I know of no one who has put so much thoroughness and energy into public housing case studies. The range of detail is astonishing, but it is packaged in a well-written narrative, not a dreary commentary on some social science tables. Altogether it is an extraordinary work because its intense scholarship witnesses its call for respect.
-- Sam Bass Warner, author of Streetcar Suburbs: The Process of Growth in Boston, 1870-1900
Vale is an extraordinary urban historian. His language has a clarity and a lilt and the stories he tells are presented in a lively style and with a fine attention to detail. Incorporating the comments of some of the hundreds of people whom he interviewed, and mining archival materials, Vale weaves together a lively chronology of three public housing developments, the environment in which they grew, and the challenges they faced. This is a top-notch piece of work.
-- Rachel G. Bratt, Tufts University
Professor Lawrence J. Vale offers a detailed and multilayered analysis of the history of the three Boston public housing projects -- West Broadway, Franklin Field, and Commonwealth. This interdisciplinary study not only relies on traditional archival sources such as the Boston Housing Authority Records and the John F. Collins Papers but uses more than three hundred interviews with public housing residents
Vale effectively uses the history of all three projects to prescribe actions to salvage the large-scale public housing. The book, which should be added to the short list of must-read studies of public housing, is persuasively argued, clearly written, and effectively argued. Its findings have significance far beyond Boston
The larger lessons given by this excellent study have relevance to scholars, officials, and activists committed to salvaging public housing.
-- Robert B. Fairbanks Journal of American History
[ Reclaiming Public Housing] is based on rich historical studies of three Boston public housing projects initiated between 1949 and 1954 that were selected for redevelopment in the 1980s after slipping into serious crises
One of the strengths of this study is its comparative approach
Those looking for simple "one-size-fits-all" solutions will be disappointed. Vale doesn't believe that private or public management is inherently better, that design determines outcomes, or that mixing incomes will necessarily improve community social capital. What he does believe is that, despite decades of often brutal mismanagement, tenants can be effectively engaged to work with concerned management to find solutions to some of the problems that have accumulated
This is a well-researched, carefully nuanced story of three distinctive urban places. Not only will it provide a variety of insights into the politics of public housing redevelopment, it is also a captivating read along the way.
-- Alan Smart Canadian Journal of Urban Research