An era of growth and movement within the U.S. prompted new policies to address the changing faces and places of many citizens. Local governments began to exert considerable influence over the allocation of space within their jurisdictions, passing zoning laws that clearly delineated acceptable land use and residential patterns. Many of these zoning rules either explicitly or implicitly restricted BIPOC from living in desirable neighborhoods with better amenities. Racial covenants further limited options by attaching deed restrictions to properties preventing their lease or sale to members of designated races or ethnicities, which state and federal courts upheld as permissible. By the start of the Great Depression, residential segregation had become the norm across much of the United States.
The continued oppression of Black Americans and other communities of color in the Jim Crow South, coupled with increased demand for industrial labor in cities in the North and West, prompted the relocation of an estimated 1.6 million Black Americans between 1910 and 1940. Many lived in multifamily buildings, which quickly flourished across urban areas as a convenient and affordable housing option for the rapidly expanding populations of industrial workers and their families. Yet BIPOC still faced rampant discrimination and racialized violence in their new communities, limiting their options for where to live and relegating them to the least desirable neighborhoods and housing stock.