Thursday, September 17, 2015

Siedlung Altenhof, Essen: the shift from factory housing to social housing



In the borough of Rüttenscheid south of the old city and located on the edge of the Stadtwald Friedrich Krupp AG acquired arable fields with the aim of building a number of houses for retired or invalid former employees of the Krupp company. Friedrich Krupp founded the first phase of what was to become Siedlung Altenhof in 1893 as the Invalidenkolonie Altenhof. Such social provision and attention for former factory workers was a revolutionary move as the idea was to provide rent free housing for the invalid and widowed. This colony for the infirm consisted of two C-shaped terraces of small houses on either side of a garden square.

The subsequent Siedlung Altenhof was built as a way of thanks for the statue of Alfred Krupp (1892 by Alois Mayer) commissioned by the factory workers. On the plinth Alfred's motto is engraved: the purpose of work must be the benefit of the community. His son Friedrich Krupp commissions the Krupp Housing Division with the development of  607 dwellings for retired former employees to be housed here rent free.

Robert Schmohl designed the buildings in an eclectic Heimatstil that is also known as Cottage style. Depending on the social status terraced, semidetached and detached houses were provided along parallel curved streets that made the most of the triangular site. The first building phase was completed between 1893 and 1896, the second -beyond the mine railway of Zeche Langenbrahm- was built between 1899 and 1907. This factory housing, however similar in appearance to garden villages should not by typified as such, as it pre-dates Ebenezer Howards book of 1898. The Altenhof is rather one of those examples of social labourers housing that has inspired later developments.



The Siedlungen Altenhof I and II are situated on either side of the Woodland Park (WP), with a half open landscape garden (LG) behind the Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria Erholungshaus (KAV) Next to this leisure centre and convalescence home, the Frauenerholungshaus (F), Prebendary for widows (P) and Wöchnerinnenklinik (WK), a post natal clinic once stood. On the edge of this hospital site the chapel (C) was -and still is- located. On the edge of the first building phase the GP-Surgery (S) was located. The invalid colony (IC) is located further west and links this housing estate with pre-existing urban fabric. Beyond Altenhof II a football stadium (FS) was built in 1927 on the Uhlenkrug. Altenhof II only has housing and no other provisions or amenities.

A church, shops, women's clinic and a hospital were part of the housing estate Along the eastern edge of the Siedlung Altenhof an extensive recreational area was created out of the existing wood as the Kruppsche Waldpark (Krupp Woodland Park). It was thought important for the inhabitants to have access to healthcare after retirement and also keep active and spend time outdoors in nature.

After the sudden death of Friedrich Krupp in 1902 the work on the Siedlung Altenhof was completed. Along the lines of his ideas around 1907 plans were drawn up to create a second social housing estate as part of a belt of garden village satellites. This Siedlung Altenhof II was begun beyond the Waldpark on the edge of the Stadtwald. The site chosen known as Verreshöhe has a marked slope so the usual Unwinesque layout was difficult to realise, instead curving streets follow the slope and steep stairs and streets connect these residential streets.

The construction of this garden village, again designed by Robert Schmohl, started in 1907 and was interrupted by WW1. So in 1914 only the northern half of the present garden village had been completed. Some more housing was erected in 1926-27. The garden village would be completed in 1937. This southern section is also known as Altenhof-Heide. It is this last section that has some Unwinesque features. Most of Altenhof II is comparable to Altenhof I and best typified as a semi-rural housing estate with factory housing.



The two estates of the Altenhof were built in several phases in 1893 (phase 0), between 1893-1896 (1), between 1899 and 1907 (2), between 1907 and 19154 (3), between 1926 and 1927 (4), in 1927 (4*) and between 1935 and 1937 (5).

As a result of the building of a new motorway most of the Waldpark was destroyed. This changed the spatial configuration of the old and housing estate and the garden village, effectively separating them. A new trunk road was also built along the edge of Altenhof II. Thus this garden village became isolated between infrastructure. Most of Altenhof I was demolished in the 1977 to make room for the new Alfried Krupp Hospital, only the invalid colony around the Gussmannplatz, the chapel, some widows houses and 4 detached houses remain. Other parts that lay derelict for years have recently been developed for new housing. The quality of what remains shows what a misguided decision it was to sacrifice the Siedlung Altenhof I for enormous parking places around a good example of bad 1970s architecture. The houses in Altenhof II, that still survives almost intact, have been privatised and are now occupied by people with no direct links to the Thyssen-Krupp company.



The Siedlung Altenhof I has been demolished apart from some fragments and has been replaced by the new hospital (H). Al the present buildings are shown in orange. Another mayor impact has been the building of a motorway (M52) and a trunk road (K3). The railways have been decommissioned. The northern track has been cleared for a long distance cycling route (a true cycle super highway!).The first two building phases of Altenhof II were built around the old farmstead (F) on the Verreshöhe.

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