Nickerson Gardens

Coordinates: 33°55′56″N 118°14′52″W / 33.93229°N 118.24769°W / 33.93229; -118.24769
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Nickerson Gardens
Map
General information
Location1590 East 114th Street, Watts, Los Angeles, California, United States
Status1,066 units
Other information
Governing
body
Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles

Nickerson Gardens is a 1,066-unit public housing apartment complex at 1590 East 114th Street[1] in Watts, Los Angeles, California.

Nickerson Gardens consists of 156 buildings with townhouse style units made up on single bedroom units. It was completed in the year 1955, and the original architect was Paul Revere Williams. It was named after William Nickerson, Jr., the founder and former CEO of Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company. The complex is owned and managed by the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles. Nickerson Gardens is the largest public housing development west of the Mississippi River.

The complex occupies the blocks northeast of the corner of Imperial Highway and Central Avenue, and southwest of 111th St and Compton Avenue. It is on the border of both Watts (a district of South Los Angeles) and the Census Designated Place (CDP) of Willowbrook.

In the mid-1990s, Nickerson Gardens was 95% African American. By 2004 it was 75% African American and continues to drop to this day.[2]

Nickerson Gardens is occasionally the recognized birthplace of the Bounty Hunter Bloods gang. A Los Angeles Times article on November 17, 2007 detailed gangs which had patrolled in and around Nickerson Gardens.[3]

Nickerson Gardens was also home to R&B group The Sylvers.

Location

Education

Nickerson Gardens is assigned to the following Los Angeles Unified School District schools:

References

  1. ^ "Public Housing Developments" (PDF). Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles. Hacla.org. 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 29, 2013.
  2. ^ Freeman, Dennis (25 March 2004). "Nickerson Gardens Targeted for Redevelopment". Los Angeles Sentinel. p. A11. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ Los Angeles Times

33°55′56″N 118°14′52″W / 33.93229°N 118.24769°W / 33.93229; -118.24769