What, exactly, is a "flophouse?"

I lived in one in the early eighties. One small room, one small window, no cooking allowed, and the bathroom was one floor down at the other end of the hall.

I am still waiting for the obligatory Monty Python quote:)

If this site is to be believed, there are around 3 dozen SROs (single room, shared bathroom) open in the city of Chicago as of a year ago, not even counting the ones in the suburbs.

http://www.fox16.com/news/local/story/City-ask-Judge-to-close-Heritage-House-Inn/d/story/6DF_ZQSlrk6gniSnYimWPw

Here in Little Rock, Arkansas we’ve got the Heritage House Inn which is most definitely a flop house. And despite the linked article it’s still in business. I make no claims as to the economic viability of flop houses everywhere but they still fill a niche in some places.

I love this review I picked up about the Heritage House Inn.

“If you are a citizen of Little Rock that has come across hard times and are looking for a cheap place to stay while you get back on your feet, then this might be the place for you. If you are a road weary traveler looking for a place to stop for the night, and all other hotels in a 10 mile radius are full, then you might be better off to drive further down the road.”

There are also rooming houses, which are individual rooms that can be rented by the week with less hassle than renting a conventional apartment. In Montreal many have been lost to gentrification, but policymakers are starting to realize that they’re an important echelon in the housing stock between shelters etc. and proper apartments, that many people need in order to reboot their lives: Montreal's disappearing rooming houses - Spacing Montreal | Spacing Montreal

Twilight Zone did a bit of an actor visiting a “flophouse” to find a particularly badly deformed man, whose face he copied for a performance*.
It was depicted as a large room with one burly guy at a counter, with floor space as however the patrons wanted to arrange themselves - 4’x7’ or so. No cots, no blankets.

    • being the Twilight Zone, he was unable to remove the makeup - he would look like the derelict for the rest of his life. In desperation he runs to the flophouse and finds the guy - who now has the actor’s face - and is dead.
      Cute proposition, no? Ugly and alive, or handsome but dead?

Right, so I don’t think the term flophouse necessarily has come to simply refer to an SRO. Some people use it that way, but that’s probably because they’re not that familiar with SROs, and they conflate the two things. A flophouse is not meant to be anything more than a place to sleep. An SRO, on the other hand, for many, is the best that they can make under the circumstances.

Have you ever written about that here or done an “Ask the…” thread about your experiences? I’d love to hear more.

Just wanted to add my 2 cents-the Y in my city in PA still has the dorms. Communal showers, tiny rooms. It’s a mix of people fallen on hard times some who swandived onto them, with a few who would be homeless if someone wasn’t paying for them. A few bad incidents that I’ve heard of, but in general they use the gym, the small computer room and keep to themselves.

The US Army put me up for one night in the downtown Pittsburgh Y way back when. I was there with several other recruits who had been given bus tickets and Y vouchers in order to report for our induction physicals. Only time as a civilian that I can remember sharing lodgings with a total stranger. I slept very little. We had to be at the federal building at some militarily early hour, so wake up came at 4. We were instructed to shower before reporting. There was, literally, an audience of seedy looking older men while we showered. Breakfast, provided by the Y, was bland and non-descript. Definitely no more than 2 stars in the Michelin guide overall.