Gompers Houses


Samuel Gompers Houses, also known as Gompers Houses, is a public housing development built and maintained by the New York City Housing Authority on the Lower East Side of Manhattan on Pitt Street between Delancey and Stanton Streets. Gompers Houses is composed of two 20-story buildings with 474 apartments that house approximately 1,116 people. It is built on a site bordered by Stanton Street to the north, Columbia Street to the east, Delancey Street to the south, and Pitt Street to the west.

History

The development is named after Samuel Gompers, an Englishman who immigrated to the United States in 1863, where he was a cigar maker, labor unionist, and workers' rights activist, who founded an organization that would eventually become the American Federation of Labor. In his early life, Gompers lived three blocks from the site.
NYCHA broke ground for the development in 1961 and the project was completed on April 30, 1964. The development was designed by Lama, Proskauer, & Prober. The relatively high cost of land for the Gompers Houses development, $13 per square foot, forced the New York City Housing Authority to build twenty story towers rather than the preferred six story buildings. As with many of the housing projects built on the Lower East Side in the 1950s and 1960s, Gompers Houses is built in the "tower in the park" style.
By the mid 1974s, the development and the Lower East Side were becoming increasingly dangerous, so much so that in 1974 Mayor Lindsay had a publicized walking tour to persuade residents the area was safe from crime.
The development is consolidated with Rafael Hernandez Houses, Lower East Side I Infill, and Max Meltzer Tower.
Minerva Montez is the Resident Association President for Gompers Houses.