Architecture and the Ideology of Productivity: Four Public Housing Projects by Groupe Structures in Brussels (1950-65)

Authors

  • Sven Sterken

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7480/footprint.5.2.738

Abstract

The field of public housing in Belgium formed the backdrop for two crucial phenomena in the shaping of the welfare state: first, the general compartmentalization along ideological lines of all aspects of society, including housing policy and town planning; second, the adaptation of the nation’s industry, and the building trade in particular, to postwar economic conditions. In the study of welfare state housing policies in Belgium, the latter aspect has so far been overlooked. This paper therefore proposes to look into a couple of public housing projects by Groupe Structures, the largest architectural firm in the country in the postwar period. As it will be argued, the stylistic and typological evolution of these schemes reveals the growing impact of a ‘productivist ideology’ on public housing in the 1950s. Paralyzed by the steeply rising building costs, the central buzzwords became standardization, industrialization and prefabrication. However, as the paper argues, the productivity doctrine failed to live up to its expectations as the sector’s turnover remained too marginal to put sufficient pressure on the construction industry.

Author Biography

Sven Sterken

Sven Sterken received a PhD in Achitectural Engineering from the University of Ghent. He is affiliated with the University of Leuven and teaches history of architecture and urbanism at the architecture department Sint-Lucas of the Hogeschool voor Wetenschap en Kunst (Brussels, Ghent). He is also a member of the research group ARP (Architectural Cultures of the Recent Past), in which capacity he focuses on postwar public housing and religious infrastructure.

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Published

2011-06-01