by Adam Tanaka
JCHS Meyer Fellow
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For a brief window between the late 1930s and the late
1940s, life insurance companies built approximately 50,000 middle-income rental
apartments across the United States. Most were racially-segregated, market-rate
projects in semi-suburban locations. Others were central city redevelopment
projects, built with the powers of eminent domain and offering
below-market-rate rentals. Stuyvesant
Town, an 8,755-unit apartment complex in New York City developed by Met Life,
is perhaps the most famous of these projects (Figure 1) but there were many others,
including Lake Meadows in Chicago (developed by New York Life), Hancock Village
in Boston (developed by John Hancock Mutual Life), and the Chellis-Austin Homes
in Newark (developed by Prudential).
As corporate entities with access to vast institutional
funds, insurers achieved considerable economies of scale in construction,
financing, and operation, and accepted longer, lower yields than conventional
real estate developers. As such, policymakers hoped that life insurers and
other fiduciary institutions, such as savings banks, would play a key role in
building and operating large-scale, low-cost urban housing and in modernizing
the postwar city more generally. By the early 1950s, however, a combination of
disappointing financial returns and bruising controversies over discriminatory
leasing drove insurers from the housing field.
While the volume of life insurance housing soon paled in the face of the postwar suburban boom — built for much the same demographic and often financed by life insurance dollars — insurers’ brief venture into multifamily development represents a significant and understudied episode in the history of affordable housing. With Stuyvesant Town currently enjoying an unexpected renaissance as both high-class investment and public policy touchstone, the time is ripe for a reevaluation of the substantial, if controversial, legacy of life insurance housing.
In a new Joint Center working paper, I provide an overview
of the “rise and fall” of life insurance housing in the postwar period, with a
focus on New York City, where the majority of insurance-sponsored apartments
were located. The paper is part of my larger dissertation project, which examines
the political and economic forces that drove various entities — including life
insurance companies, labor unions, public authorities, and for-profit
developers — to build some of the world’s largest middle-income housing
projects in New York in the mid 20th century, as well as the factors
that abruptly terminated this “large-scale approach” in the mid-1970s.