Collective housing (CH) is undergoing a revival in Belgium. Since 2009, the Flemish Government Architect and his team have been advocating CH, stressing its importance as a task for architects given the demand for affordable housing and the need to reduce the environmental impact of housing. This support for CH has converged with the work of the non-profit citizen organization Samenhuizen ("Living together") and the ad hoc initiatives taken by individual households and architects. In the Netherlands too, where there is a longer tradition of CH, the phenomenon is once more on the rise because of the housing crisis. As it is a developing topic, the terminology used for CH is also evolving. Drawing on publications on the subject in both Belgiu...
The Dutch 'Hofje van liefdadigheid' [little charity courtyard] as a building type has a number of qu...
This chapter briefly reflects on European social housing models and mainly discusses opportunities f...
Housing production in Brussels seems inappropriate regarding the needs of the population in terms of...
Collective housing (CH) is undergoing a revival in Belgium. Since 2009, the Flemish Government Archi...
Only a small percentage of the new homes built in the Netherlands in the last decades have been buil...
Belgium formally has a constitutional right to housing, in reality access to housing largely depends...
Alternative forms of dwelling, and collaborative housing models in particular, are again gaining an ...
This research deals with the affordable housing problem for housing seekers who cannot find a house ...
Belgium and the Netherlands are very different in their spatial outlook and in the way housing is or...
Belgium experienced two waves of ‘innovative housing initiatives’ in recent years. The first one, wh...
Europe has witnessed the re-emergence of different self-organized forms of housing initiatives. One ...
A financialized housing market entails systemic shortage of affordable housing. Rotterdam’s continuo...
Starting from the early 1950s until the late 1970s, a multitude of new collective spaces, such as cu...
Brussels faces a growing housing challenge. Figures show for the present situation a quantitative ga...
“First, we shape our buildings. Then our buildings shape us.” - Winston Churchill ION is a professio...
The Dutch 'Hofje van liefdadigheid' [little charity courtyard] as a building type has a number of qu...
This chapter briefly reflects on European social housing models and mainly discusses opportunities f...
Housing production in Brussels seems inappropriate regarding the needs of the population in terms of...
Collective housing (CH) is undergoing a revival in Belgium. Since 2009, the Flemish Government Archi...
Only a small percentage of the new homes built in the Netherlands in the last decades have been buil...
Belgium formally has a constitutional right to housing, in reality access to housing largely depends...
Alternative forms of dwelling, and collaborative housing models in particular, are again gaining an ...
This research deals with the affordable housing problem for housing seekers who cannot find a house ...
Belgium and the Netherlands are very different in their spatial outlook and in the way housing is or...
Belgium experienced two waves of ‘innovative housing initiatives’ in recent years. The first one, wh...
Europe has witnessed the re-emergence of different self-organized forms of housing initiatives. One ...
A financialized housing market entails systemic shortage of affordable housing. Rotterdam’s continuo...
Starting from the early 1950s until the late 1970s, a multitude of new collective spaces, such as cu...
Brussels faces a growing housing challenge. Figures show for the present situation a quantitative ga...
“First, we shape our buildings. Then our buildings shape us.” - Winston Churchill ION is a professio...
The Dutch 'Hofje van liefdadigheid' [little charity courtyard] as a building type has a number of qu...
This chapter briefly reflects on European social housing models and mainly discusses opportunities f...
Housing production in Brussels seems inappropriate regarding the needs of the population in terms of...