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Tower and Slab: Histories of Global Mass Housing [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 222 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 470 g, 61 Halftones, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Sep-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415676290
  • ISBN-13: 9780415676298
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 59,91 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 222 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 470 g, 61 Halftones, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-Sep-2011
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415676290
  • ISBN-13: 9780415676298
Tower and Slab looks at the contradictory history of the modernist mass housing block - home to millions of city dwellers around the world. Few urban forms have roused as much controversy. While in the United States decades-long criticism caused the demolition of most mass housing projects for the poor, in the booming metropolises of Shanghai and Mumbai remarkably similar developments are being built for the wealthy middle class. While on the surface the modernist apartment block appears universal, it is in fact diverse in its significance and connotations as its many different cultural contexts.

Florian Urban studies the history of mass housing in seven narratives: Chicago, Paris, Berlin, Brasilia, Mumbai, Moscow, and Shanghai. Investigating the complex interactions between city planning and social history, Tower and Slab shows how the modernist vision to house the masses in serial blocks succeeded in certain contexts and failed in others. Success and failure, in this respect, refers not only to the original goals to solve the housing crisis and provide modern standards for the entire society but equally to changing significance of the housing blocks within the respective societies and their perception by architects, politicians, and inhabitants.

These differences show that design is not to blame for mass housings mixed record of success. The comparison of the apparently similar projects suggests that triumph or disaster does not depend on a single variable but rather on a complex formula that includes not only form, but also social composition, location within the city, effective maintenance, and a variety of cultural, social, and political factors.
Acknowledgments ix
Preface xi
Mark Jarzombek
Introduction 1(6)
Mass housing---between glory and shame
1(1)
Continuous principles: paternalism and standardization
2(2)
Seven historical narratives
4(3)
Chapter 1 Social Reform, State Control, and the Origins of Mass Housing
7(12)
Housing and the social question
7(1)
The origins of industrialized construction
8(2)
The modernist movement in the interwar period: the first mass housing developments in Germany, France, and England
10(3)
The post-war era: mass housing goes global
13(6)
Chapter 2 Mass Housing in Chicago
19(18)
Anti-high-rise America
19(3)
Tower blocks in the Black Belt
22(2)
Equal dwelling conditions in a market economy
24(4)
"Brutal buildings"
28(3)
New York exceptionalism
31(1)
Replacing towers with pitched-roof houses
32(3)
Exorcising the spirits of the past
35(2)
Chapter 3 The Concrete Cordon Around Paris
37(22)
Victims of modernism?
37(4)
Charity and control
41(3)
Building a concrete cordon
44(5)
Sarcellitis: the mass housing disease
49(2)
Improving the grands ensembles?
51(2)
Cite de la Muette: mass housing and mass murder
53(2)
Mass housing and the geography of exclusion
55(4)
Chapter 4 Slabs versus Tenements in East and West Berlin
59(20)
Battles over buildings
59(1)
Organic concrete blocks
60(4)
Fall from public grace
64(1)
The "murdered city"
65(1)
Blurred party lines
66(2)
The "slab" in East Berlin
68(4)
Demonic tower blocks, homely late-nineteenth-century tenements
72(1)
Reconfiguring old and new
73(2)
Ghettos for immigrants?
75(1)
The calm after the storm
76(3)
Chapter 5 Brasilia, the Slab Block Capital
79(22)
Order and progress: a new metropolis as a condenser for modernization
79(2)
The superquadra
81(5)
Egalitarian dreams in a polarized country
86(2)
"City of Hope" and modernist dystopia
88(3)
The "tower in the jungle"
91(1)
Pilot plan versus satellite cities?
92(6)
An architectural comeback?
98(3)
Chapter 6 Mumbai---Mass Housing for the Upper Crust
101(26)
The tower and the slum
101(4)
A metropolis on seven islands
105(1)
Colonial precedents: the chawl and the apartment block
106(2)
From independence to neoliberalism: housing in a mixed economy
108(4)
1993-present: the state as facilitator of housing
112(5)
"High-rise slums for the rich": the Back Bay land reclamation
117(2)
Why is there no prefabrication in India?
119(2)
Alternative approaches: sites and services
121(2)
Standardized upscale dwellings
123(4)
Chapter 7 Prefab Moscow
127(18)
The industrialization of the Soviet construction industry
127(7)
Oxygen for the housing market
134(1)
Stratifications of a socialist metropolis
135(4)
Privatization and differentiation
139(2)
Panel buildings in Russia today
141(4)
Chapter 8 High-Rise Shanghai
145(24)
The Shanghai skyline
145(3)
The 1950s: standard design, individual construction
148(1)
Modernist "new villages"
149(4)
Prefab experiments
153(1)
Structural reform: privatization and polarization
154(4)
High-rise apartments for the privileged and for the masses
158(2)
Tower block compounds versus historic alleys?
160(5)
Shanghai: future capital of tower block housing?
165(4)
Chapter 9 Global Architecture, Locally Conditoned
169(8)
Adapting the mass housing block to local conditions
169(3)
Ambiguous effects, contextual perception
172(2)
Flexible meaning, inflexible architecture
174(3)
Interview Partners 177(2)
Notes 179(27)
Index 206
Florian Urban is Head of Architectural History and Urban Studies at the Mackintosh School of Architecture, Glasgow School of Art. From 2006 to 2008 he taught at the Center for Metropolitan Studies, Technische Universität Berlin. He holds a Master of Fine Arts from the Hochschule der Künste Berlin, an MA in Urban Planning from UCLA, and a PhD in History and Theory of Architecture from MIT. He is the author of Neo-historical East Berlin Architecture and Urban Design in the German Democratic Republic 1970-1990 (Ashgate, 2009).