Thinking
Hamburg: Chilehaus
This majestic expressionist 20s office building shows the complexity and beauty which can be derived from a single brick and a single window. (You can fit 400 flats in it too…)
Rotterdam + Hamburg: Markthal + Elbphilharmonie
Gehry’s art gallery gave birth to the ‘Bilbao effect’: the lifting of a challenged area through the sheer power of iconic architecture. Did adding housing to this mix work for Rotterdam and Hamburg?
Amsterdam: Ijburg
‘The problem with delivering a lot more new housing in crowded cities is that they don’t make new land you know.’ Or do they…?
Amsterdam: Funenpark
A ‘human zoo’ is the only way of describing Funenpark: a series of unique pavilions set in a parkland with no streets and teeming with pedestrian activity. Could English residents ever live in this public way?
Rotterdam: Justuskwartier and Le Medi
Gating estates can be controversial: but perhaps the ability to do it, even if only at night, can give residents occasional freedom to enjoy their shared space more freely?
Utrecht: Leidsche Rijn
Grafting large new communities on to existing cities is a sensible way to add more homes: but communicating that to existing citizens is a fine art. Utrecht shows the way.
Amsterdam: Parkrand
Living in an icon can be surprisingly simple: you just have to learn to love giant flower pots and pendant lamps.
Brussels: Cheval Noir
Artist communities are rich with potential for communal activity, but also for gentrification: what if people don’t want to join in?
Brussels: Brutopia
Fancy cleaning the common areas where you live twice a year? And doing the gardening? What about sorting the rubbish out? It’s a step too far for a lot of people, but not for these co-housing pioneers…
London: Trafalgar Place
Elephant’s regen story is long, complicated and highly political. This is a short crit of the successful spatial quality of an early phase, enhanced through the retention of mature trees from its 1960s past.