Melrose

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Location of Melrose in New York City
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Melrose is a residential neighborhood in the New York City borough of the Bronx. It is north of Mott Haven and west of Longwood and considered as part of the South Bronx. The neighborhood is in Bronx Community Board 1. Its boundaries are East 161st Street to the north, Prospect Avenue to the east, East 149th Street to the south and Park Avenue to the west. Melrose Avenue is the primary thoroughfare. The southeastern corner of the neighborhood is served by the 2 and 5 line at Jackson Avenue, operating along Westchester Avenue. ZIP codes include 10451, 10455 and 10456. The neighborhood is served by the NYPD's 40th [1] Precinct. .

Contents

Demographics

Melrose has a population of 30,000. For decades it has been one of the poorest communities in America. Over half the population lives below the poverty line and receives public assistance (AFDC, Home Relief, Welfare and Medicaid). Over one-third of the population resides in units managed by the NYCHA. Melrose has one of the highest concentrations of Puerto Ricans in all of New York City. There is a small Dominican population. The vast majority of households are renter occupied.[2] Like the rest of the South Bronx, the neighborhood is plagued by high levels of gang activity, drug use, prostitution and homelessness.

Land use and terrain

Today Melrose is dominated by public housing complexes of various types, vacant lots and newly constructed subsidized multi-unit townhomes. Most of the original housing stock, which consisted of older multi-unit homes and tenements, was structurally damaged by arson and subsequently razed by the city. There is one secure detention center located in the community. The neighborhood contains one of the highest concentrations of NYCHA projects in the Bronx. The total land area is less than a square mile. The terrain is somewhat hilly.

The Hub-Third Avenue Business Improvement District

The Hub-Third Avenue BID is a major local retail district located where five roads converge: East 149th Street and Westchester, Willis, Melrose and Third Avenues. Many new hip-hop trends can be found here long before they spread to the rest of New York City and the world[citation needed].

Horizon Juvenile Detention Center

In 1998, the New York City Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) opened two secure juvenile detention centers. Characterized by locks on the doors and other hardware designed to restrict the movement of the residents and protect public safety, the facilities were planned with staff input to enhance residents' overall security, while allowing for quality programming.[citation needed] Horizon Juvenile Center, located in the Melrose section of the Bronx, opened on January 18, 1998.

Low-income public housing projects

  1. Adams Houses; seven buildings, 15 and 21-stories tall.
  2. Bronxchester Houses; one 18-story building.
  3. East 152nd Street-Courtlandt Avenue; two buildings, 11 and 12-stories tall.
  4. Jackson Houses; seven 16-story buildings.
  5. Melrose Houses; eight 14-story buildings.
  6. Morrisania Air Rights; three buildings, 19, 23, and 29-stories.
  7. Saint Mary's Park Houses; six 21-story buildings.
  8. South Bronx Area (Site 402); four buildings, 3-stories tall.

History

In 1973, the City of New York dismantled the Third Avenue El train, leaving a large portion of the southwestern Bronx underserved by public transportation. There is a direct correlation with the economic disparity of the neighborhoods adjacent to Third Avenue and the lack of viable subway access.[citation needed] The present options are the MTA's BX55 bus and the Melrose station of the Metro-North Railroad, which provides transportation to and from Manhattan. Both options are poor substitutes to the Third Avenue El. The City of New York presently has no plans to replace the Third Avenue El with a subway line.

Urban renewal

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After a wave of arson ravaged the low income communities of New York City throughout the 1970s, most residential structures in Melrose were left seriously damaged or destroyed. The city began to rehabilitate many formally abandoned tenement buildings and designate the low income housing beginning in the late 1970s. Also many subsidized attached multi-unit townhouses and newly constructed apartment buildings have been or are being built on vacant lots across the neighborhood.

Economy

Grupo TACA operates a Bronx-area TACA Satellite at 570 Melrose Avenue.[4]

Schools

Transportation

Facts

References

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Coordinates: 40°49′28″N 73°54′37″W / 40.8245450°N 73.9104143°W / 40.8245450; -73.9104143

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