Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro

As owners of a land plot, the poor families living in Rio de Janeiro’s loteamentos periféricos (“peripheral housing subdivisions”) have evolved their own unique ways of using their land, often with scant regard for building regulations. This is the case of the meia-água, a rectangular single-story b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thomas Cortado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Urban Research 2019-12-01
Series:Articulo: Journal of Urban Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/articulo/4355
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spelling doaj-f83224caf6394dafa09c752fd7cd2f0e2021-04-08T20:02:50ZengJournal of Urban ResearchArticulo: Journal of Urban Research1661-49412019-12-012010.4000/articulo.4355Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de JaneiroThomas CortadoAs owners of a land plot, the poor families living in Rio de Janeiro’s loteamentos periféricos (“peripheral housing subdivisions”) have evolved their own unique ways of using their land, often with scant regard for building regulations. This is the case of the meia-água, a rectangular single-story backyard construction with a mono-pitched roof. At first sight, it seems people build meia-águas simply as a means to lower construction costs, but in doing so, they offer an insight into the socio-spatial hierarchies and kinship dynamics that shape the production of space. Thus, as the family move from the meia-água at the rear to the true house at the front of the plot, the former may be abandoned completely, turned into a workshop for small-scale economic activities, or provide a means to divide the land. People would also allow their married children and ageing parents to build or occupy meia-águas, so that they can take care of one another without compromising each other’s privacy. In this case, the land plot has a centripetal effect on the “configuration of houses”.http://journals.openedition.org/articulo/4355informal settlementself-constructionprivacyconfiguration of houseslife cycleland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Cortado
spellingShingle Thomas Cortado
Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro
Articulo: Journal of Urban Research
informal settlement
self-construction
privacy
configuration of houses
life cycle
land
author_facet Thomas Cortado
author_sort Thomas Cortado
title Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro
title_short Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro
title_full Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro
title_fullStr Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro
title_full_unstemmed Meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in Rio de Janeiro
title_sort meia-água: producing space and kinship in an irregular housing subdivision in rio de janeiro
publisher Journal of Urban Research
series Articulo: Journal of Urban Research
issn 1661-4941
publishDate 2019-12-01
description As owners of a land plot, the poor families living in Rio de Janeiro’s loteamentos periféricos (“peripheral housing subdivisions”) have evolved their own unique ways of using their land, often with scant regard for building regulations. This is the case of the meia-água, a rectangular single-story backyard construction with a mono-pitched roof. At first sight, it seems people build meia-águas simply as a means to lower construction costs, but in doing so, they offer an insight into the socio-spatial hierarchies and kinship dynamics that shape the production of space. Thus, as the family move from the meia-água at the rear to the true house at the front of the plot, the former may be abandoned completely, turned into a workshop for small-scale economic activities, or provide a means to divide the land. People would also allow their married children and ageing parents to build or occupy meia-águas, so that they can take care of one another without compromising each other’s privacy. In this case, the land plot has a centripetal effect on the “configuration of houses”.
topic informal settlement
self-construction
privacy
configuration of houses
life cycle
land
url http://journals.openedition.org/articulo/4355
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