Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/35744
Title: RESEARCH BY DESIGN AS METHOD FOR THE REGENERATION OF POST-WAR MODERNIST HOUSING ENSEMBLES
Authors: MOORS, Marie 
Advisors: Van Cleempoel, Koen
Plevoets, Bie
Issue Date: 2021
Source: Vaz Milheiro, Ana; Lima Rodrigues, Inês; Serrazina, Beatriz; Matos Silva, Leonor; DINÂMIA’CET-Iscte; Ana Vaz Milheiro (Ed.). Optimistic Suburbia 2 –International Conference Proceedings, p. 146 -152
Abstract: This paper is written in the light of a larger PhD research entitled BELGIAN MOMO HERITAGE ON THE RADAR – ‘Re-reading modernist housing estates: an inquiry into the value of threatened heritage sites and the possibilities of adaptive reuse as a method for re-evaluation’. Today, a considerable number of the urban settlements or high-rise estates, constructed according to Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM) principles, are threatened with demolition following years of neglect and lack of maintenance. Notwithstanding the fact that they are all comprising discursive segments of the post-war time period, these estates are in poor (technical and social) condition. Additionally, none of them is protected, which means that the path for demolition is fully open. This research opens up some future visions by considering these ensembles as an opportunity to re-state and re-invest, instead of regarding them as an inescapable problem. The concept of research by design is used as a methodology to develop new insights. Within the framework of the PhD research architecture master students have tested the hypotheses of different regeneration scenarios on a larger scale of 13 case studies. The aim is to investigate the adaptive reuse potential of this modernist typology. This paper focuses on one of the case studies, specifically the Jan De Voslei housing complex designed by architect Jos Smolderen (Antwerp, BE). In the first part of the paper the general problem statement is introduced. In the second part, the objective of the exercise is explored, and an overview of the regeneration scenarios is explained. Subsequently, the students’ results that focus on an activation of the landscape values and the so-called parasite-concept of the Jan De Voslei housing complex are presented through drawings and isometries. In conclusion, these first outcomes of this exercise are discussed combined with a reflection and suggestion for further research.
Keywords: Middle-class Mass housing;Research by design;Modernist housing;Regeneration strategies
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/35744
ISBN: 9789897815508
Rights: © of the images featured in this book are the responsibility of the authors of the texts. Fig. 1 – Areal view of the Jan De Voslei in Antwerp. Source: Google Earth, edited by Marie Moors. Fig. 2 - Activation-of-landscape-values-strategy: Creation of ‘streets-in-the-sky’ reconnects the mid-rise buildings(‘society) of the Jan De Voslei in Antwerp; isometric drawing. Source: Caroline De Queker and Toke Vanhove. Fig. 3 - Parasite-strategy: addition of balconies creating collective open terraces on every other floor in the mid-rise buildings of the Jan De Voslei in Antwerp; floorplan, section and elevation. Source: Caroline De Queker and Toke Vanhove Fig. 4 - Parasite-strategy in combination with activation of nature: addition of trapezium shaped (green) balconies in the armpits of the towers of the Jan De Voslei in Antwerp; isometric drawing, section and floor plan. Source: Selina Steegen and Kimberly Lievens
Category: C1
Type: Proceedings Paper
Appears in Collections:Research publications

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Pages from OS2 Proceedings 2021.pdfPublished version284.66 kBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record

Page view(s)

48
checked on Sep 7, 2022

Download(s)

16
checked on Sep 7, 2022

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.