From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishshantytownshan‧ty‧town /ˈʃæntiˌtaʊn/ noun [countable] TOWNa very poor area in or near a town where people live in small houses made from thin sheets of wood, tin etc
Examples from the Corpus
shantytown• Well into the 1900s there were black shantytowns outside of Leavenworth, Atchison, and Kansas City.• People were crammed into old, dilapidated buildings or flimsy shantytowns or crudely built new housing.• How many shantytowns of the Third World would not cherish one of those suburban bungalows you so despise?• Bulldozers moved in to knock down the shantytown.• He searched for the uncle as well, scouring often through the shantytown near Cholon; but he never found him either.