Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience

In Paris, the history and the evolution of social housing provision merge with those of a centennial institution. Created in 1914, the Office Public d’Habitations à Bon Marché, currently called Paris Habitat, manages more than 1,200 operations, 120,000 housing units inhabited by 200,000 residents....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Javier Arpa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Jap Sam Books 2015-12-01
Series:Footprint
Online Access:https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/995
id doaj-b568fdce090e40378cf3868ea5ffca26
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b568fdce090e40378cf3868ea5ffca262021-02-08T12:06:21ZengJap Sam BooksFootprint1875-15041875-14902015-12-019210.7480/footprint.9.2.995950Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat ExperienceJavier Arpa0Harvard Graduate School of Design In Paris, the history and the evolution of social housing provision merge with those of a centennial institution. Created in 1914, the Office Public d’Habitations à Bon Marché, currently called Paris Habitat, manages more than 1,200 operations, 120,000 housing units inhabited by 200,000 residents. This article reviews an investigation to this exceptional heritage commissioned by the Pavillon de l'Arsenal in Paris, which resulted in the exhibition and catalogue Paris Habitat: Cent ans de ville, cent ans de vie, presented by the institution in 2015. The investigation, exhibition and publication were organized around the analysis of ten fragments of reality that, rather than matching administrative divisions or urban planning projects, span municipalities, districts and infrastructures. From low-cost to large-scale housing, from concerns with hygiene to ecology issues, each one of the building ensembles analyzed bears witness to the will to change society through housing. Written by the project’s main curator and catalogue editor, this review details the process through which essential questions formulated early on – What is the city we want like? How is it built? – were answered to: selecting from the wealth of material produced by Paris Habitat over one hundred years of activity, the team exposed their political stance on urban strategies at large. Importantly, Paris Habitat’s ‘actions’ substantiated the team’s belief that our knowledge of this long, continuous urban experiment can contribute to improve the metropolises of today and strengthen its ability to answer contemporary concerns: the transformation of offices into housing, new residents’ participation formulas, new building and conception processes, which are key elements in the making of cities that need to be dense, diverse, intense, fertile and agile. https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/995
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Javier Arpa
spellingShingle Javier Arpa
Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience
Footprint
author_facet Javier Arpa
author_sort Javier Arpa
title Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience
title_short Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience
title_full Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience
title_fullStr Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience
title_full_unstemmed Housing and the construction of the city: the Paris Habitat Experience
title_sort housing and the construction of the city: the paris habitat experience
publisher Jap Sam Books
series Footprint
issn 1875-1504
1875-1490
publishDate 2015-12-01
description In Paris, the history and the evolution of social housing provision merge with those of a centennial institution. Created in 1914, the Office Public d’Habitations à Bon Marché, currently called Paris Habitat, manages more than 1,200 operations, 120,000 housing units inhabited by 200,000 residents. This article reviews an investigation to this exceptional heritage commissioned by the Pavillon de l'Arsenal in Paris, which resulted in the exhibition and catalogue Paris Habitat: Cent ans de ville, cent ans de vie, presented by the institution in 2015. The investigation, exhibition and publication were organized around the analysis of ten fragments of reality that, rather than matching administrative divisions or urban planning projects, span municipalities, districts and infrastructures. From low-cost to large-scale housing, from concerns with hygiene to ecology issues, each one of the building ensembles analyzed bears witness to the will to change society through housing. Written by the project’s main curator and catalogue editor, this review details the process through which essential questions formulated early on – What is the city we want like? How is it built? – were answered to: selecting from the wealth of material produced by Paris Habitat over one hundred years of activity, the team exposed their political stance on urban strategies at large. Importantly, Paris Habitat’s ‘actions’ substantiated the team’s belief that our knowledge of this long, continuous urban experiment can contribute to improve the metropolises of today and strengthen its ability to answer contemporary concerns: the transformation of offices into housing, new residents’ participation formulas, new building and conception processes, which are key elements in the making of cities that need to be dense, diverse, intense, fertile and agile.
url https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/995
work_keys_str_mv AT javierarpa housingandtheconstructionofthecitytheparishabitatexperience
_version_ 1724280092575662080