After the first industrialisation of continental
Europe in the Sillon Industriel in Wallonia, the next wave of industrialisation
was more widespread and also involved the Ruhr Area resulting in a rapid
development of mining and other industrial activities within the Ruhr Revier.
These factories and collieries needed workers, that were brought in from
elsewhere, often far afield. Small numbers could be absorbed into existing
settlements, but the rapid expansion of mining in the Ruhr Area meant that
extra housing provision was needed, so dedicated rented accommodation
(Mietskasernen) and colonies were built.
There are roughly speaking four types of workers
colonies: the street colony, the grid colony, the open colony and the high
density colony. The first type comprises, as the name suggests, of little more
than a street with houses built on one or either side. This is the oldest type.
The earliest colonies comprised of little more than a row of houses built along
an existing street (Hüttenheim) or a new street built near the workplace on
whatever plot of land could be acquired. Within this type there is great
variation. There could be a single straight street with housing on either side.
This housing could comprise of apartments in larger blocks, Mulhouse Quadrangles
or linked family dwellings (semidetached cottages). As the size of colonies
grew the single street was repeated to form a series of parallel streets. This
situation could grow over time, but was also consciously planned. In rare cases
the single streets are placed at an angle as one runs off from the other. Examples
are plenty in Essen, Oberhausen, Moers, Mülheim, Gelsenkirchen and Bochum.
Dorplein and Lommel-Werkplaatsen (Campine) also belong to this type.
The simple colony consists of little more than a
street with workers cottages (left) along as street upwind from the colliery. After
the 1855 World Exhibition in Paris the Mulhouse Quadrangle quickly spread. This
resulted in a row of these building between two paths (right) as a variation on
the street colony.
Not that colonies with connected streets are a rarity.
Mostly such colonies were planned on a grid layout. This is a very common type
in the Ruhr Area and beyond (Campine and Limburg). It allowed for cheaper
developments as everything could be standardised and housing could be repeated.
The kind of housing could again be variable and depended on the company. This
type was popular throughout the latter part of the 19th and the first quarter
of the 20th centuries. Examples can be found throughout the Ruhr Area (Essen, Dortmund, Gelsenkirchen, etcetera) and in the Low Countries (Genk-Waterschei, Genk-Zwartberg,
Houthalen, Eisden, Overpelt-Fabriek, Olen, Gompel, Heerlen,
Heveadorp).
As colonies grew the grid was a well-known solution
for organising the settlement. These colonies typically comprise of housing and
some amenities (a casino or hall). Often the type of housing is differentiated
according to the class of worker. In Germany hostels for single male workers
are often included.
Influenced by changing attitudes towards urban
planning in Germany based on the movement towards a more artistic kind of
planning, the regular grid was gradually abandoned. Shortly after both the Garden City Movement and Modernism (Neues Bauen) advocated an open housing
estate. The result could vary tremendously with at one end a village-like
Unwinesque housing estate with curving streets and at the other end a geometric
composition of long rows of family houses and higher apartment blocks on
parallel streets.
This shift also coincides with the move towards social
housing provision. This means that companies are now setting up building societies
and that colonies morph into company housing estates and become similar to the
other social housing.
The Mietskaserne developed into the Gartenhof around
the same time. So from 1900 onwards high density housing of airy apartments
wrapped around a communal garden with additional amenities spring up in several
German cities. Again this type occurs more often as social housing (Vienna) than
as company housing, but there are several examples in the in Essen (Luisenhof,
Albertshof, Alfredshof).The type is also copied for social housing in for
instance Amsterdam and London.
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