Elandshof Amsterdam

Bastiaan Jongerius

Authors

  • Frederique van Andel TU Delft, Architecture and the Built Environment

Abstract

In early 2012, two buildings that at first sight look like individual houses were realized on Elandsstraat in Amsterdam. Behind the façades, there is a collective project in which six families combined forces to realize their individual housing requirements. One of the initiators is Bastiaan Jongerius. Together with neighbours from a previous collective project (a third family quickly joined in as well), he went in search of a suitable site, and found it on Elandsstraat. In order to avoid a public tender, the city council sold the plot, including the contaminated ground and buildings, and subsequently granted a subsidy for the demolition and ground sanitation. Because there was room on the site for six residential units, the collective went in search of three more families, who were found via friends, acquaintances and the children’s school. The ground was split into six titles of joint ownership and each household received the rights to a sixth of the communal garden. The establishment of the ‘Elzes’ association marked the beginning of an intensive process of meetings, division of responsibilities and monitoring of costs; consultancy firm De Regie was called in when necessary. To begin with, the surface area each family needed was determined and what the preferences were for location on the site. The initiators had first choice here. Ultimately the requirements proved to be a good fit and the architect went to work on the design.

Three houses have been realized on the Elandsstraat within two individually designed buildings. The house on the left is narrow; the different living functions are grouped round centrally situated stairs. The broader building on the right consists of two houses, which each utilize part of the ground floor. They are accessed from an alleyway that runs under the building and leads to the communal courtyard. The lowermost house has a kitchen-diner on the ground floor on the Elandstraat; the upper house has a garden room on the courtyard.

Author Biography

Frederique van Andel, TU Delft, Architecture and the Built Environment

Frederique van Andel holds a Master’s degree in both urban planning and architecture from Delft University of Technology. She worked for Mecanoo architecten and DP6 architectuurstudio in Delft, and lived in Barcelona where she worked with architect Toni Gironès. Since 2006, Frederique is a researcher and lecturer in the Global Housing research group of the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment of TU Delft. Her main topic of interest is affordable housing for growing cities in the Global South. Frederique curated the exhibition ‘Global Housing – Affordable Dwellings for Growing Cities’ (2016) with venues in Delft and Addis Ababa. She is editor of the book series DASH (Delft Architectural Studies on Housing) and coordinates and edits the online Platform for Affordable Dwelling (PAD). Frederique teaches Master courses on Global Housing Design and Bachelor courses on Plan Analysis. She is project manager for the research project ‘Addis Ababa Living Lab: Creating Resilient Dwelling Clusters for Urban Resettlement in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’, funded by the Dutch Research Council and TU Delft (2019-2023).

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Published

2018-06-01

How to Cite

van Andel, F. (2018). Elandshof Amsterdam: Bastiaan Jongerius. DASH | Delft Architectural Studies on Housing, 5(08), 150–155. Retrieved from https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/dash/article/view/4852