Acknowledgments |
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ix | |
Preface |
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xi | |
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Introduction |
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1 | (6) |
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Mass housing---between glory and shame |
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1 | (1) |
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Continuous principles: paternalism and standardization |
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2 | (2) |
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Seven historical narratives |
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4 | (3) |
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Chapter 1 Social Reform, State Control, and the Origins of Mass Housing |
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7 | (12) |
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Housing and the social question |
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7 | (1) |
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The origins of industrialized construction |
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8 | (2) |
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The modernist movement in the interwar period: the first mass housing developments in Germany, France, and England |
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10 | (3) |
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The post-war era: mass housing goes global |
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13 | (6) |
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Chapter 2 Mass Housing in Chicago |
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19 | (18) |
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19 | (3) |
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Tower blocks in the Black Belt |
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22 | (2) |
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Equal dwelling conditions in a market economy |
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24 | (4) |
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28 | (3) |
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31 | (1) |
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Replacing towers with pitched-roof houses |
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32 | (3) |
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Exorcising the spirits of the past |
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35 | (2) |
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Chapter 3 The Concrete Cordon Around Paris |
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37 | (22) |
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37 | (4) |
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41 | (3) |
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Building a concrete cordon |
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44 | (5) |
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Sarcellitis: the mass housing disease |
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49 | (2) |
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Improving the grands ensembles? |
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51 | (2) |
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Cite de la Muette: mass housing and mass murder |
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53 | (2) |
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Mass housing and the geography of exclusion |
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55 | (4) |
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Chapter 4 Slabs versus Tenements in East and West Berlin |
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59 | (20) |
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59 | (1) |
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60 | (4) |
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64 | (1) |
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65 | (1) |
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66 | (2) |
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The "slab" in East Berlin |
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68 | (4) |
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Demonic tower blocks, homely late-nineteenth-century tenements |
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72 | (1) |
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Reconfiguring old and new |
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73 | (2) |
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75 | (1) |
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76 | (3) |
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Chapter 5 Brasilia, the Slab Block Capital |
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79 | (22) |
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Order and progress: a new metropolis as a condenser for modernization |
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79 | (2) |
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81 | (5) |
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Egalitarian dreams in a polarized country |
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86 | (2) |
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"City of Hope" and modernist dystopia |
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88 | (3) |
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The "tower in the jungle" |
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91 | (1) |
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Pilot plan versus satellite cities? |
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92 | (6) |
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An architectural comeback? |
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98 | (3) |
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Chapter 6 Mumbai---Mass Housing for the Upper Crust |
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101 | (26) |
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101 | (4) |
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A metropolis on seven islands |
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105 | (1) |
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Colonial precedents: the chawl and the apartment block |
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106 | (2) |
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From independence to neoliberalism: housing in a mixed economy |
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108 | (4) |
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1993-present: the state as facilitator of housing |
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112 | (5) |
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"High-rise slums for the rich": the Back Bay land reclamation |
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117 | (2) |
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Why is there no prefabrication in India? |
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119 | (2) |
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Alternative approaches: sites and services |
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121 | (2) |
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Standardized upscale dwellings |
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123 | (4) |
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127 | (18) |
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The industrialization of the Soviet construction industry |
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127 | (7) |
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Oxygen for the housing market |
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134 | (1) |
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Stratifications of a socialist metropolis |
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135 | (4) |
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Privatization and differentiation |
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139 | (2) |
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Panel buildings in Russia today |
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141 | (4) |
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Chapter 8 High-Rise Shanghai |
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145 | (24) |
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145 | (3) |
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The 1950s: standard design, individual construction |
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148 | (1) |
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149 | (4) |
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153 | (1) |
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Structural reform: privatization and polarization |
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154 | (4) |
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High-rise apartments for the privileged and for the masses |
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158 | (2) |
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Tower block compounds versus historic alleys? |
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160 | (5) |
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Shanghai: future capital of tower block housing? |
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165 | (4) |
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Chapter 9 Global Architecture, Locally Conditoned |
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169 | (8) |
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Adapting the mass housing block to local conditions |
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169 | (3) |
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Ambiguous effects, contextual perception |
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172 | (2) |
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Flexible meaning, inflexible architecture |
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174 | (3) |
Interview Partners |
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177 | (2) |
Notes |
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179 | (27) |
Index |
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206 | |