The History And Legacy Of The Cabrini Green Housing Project

Two girls double dutching (original Sun-Times caption simply says: “Olympic-like events”), Cabrini-Green, SUN-TIMES NEGATIVE COLLECTION, 1984
Two girls double dutching (original Sun-Times caption simply says: "Olympic-like events"), Cabrini-Green, SUN-TIMES NEGATIVE COLLECTION, 1984
Two girls double dutching (original Sun-Times caption simply says: “Olympic-like events”), Cabrini-Green, SUN-TIMES NEGATIVE COLLECTION, 1984
Two girls double dutching (original Sun-Times caption simply says: "Olympic-like events"), Cabrini-Green, SUN-TIMES NEGATIVE COLLECTION, 1984

The History And Legacy Of The Cabrini Green Housing Project

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Seventy acres, 23 buildings and 15,000 people. Those are the numbers behind one of the most well-known, and perhaps notorious, public housing projects in Chicago. Cabrini Green was, for many, a symbol of racist housing policies, crime and economic struggles. But for the thousands who lived there is was also home, family and community.

Writer Ben Austen spent seven years chronicling some of those lives and tracing the long history of Cabrini Green for his new book High Risers: Cabrini Green and the Fate of American Public Housing.

Morning Shift talks to Austen about why this particular housing project stands out among the many that once existed in Chicago.

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Ben Austen, author, High Risers: Cabrini Green and the Fate of American Public Housing