Thursday, March 13, 2014

Changing ideas: planned suburbanisation around Utrecht



Utrecht in the province of the same name is the fourth largest city in the Netherlands with almost 328,00 inhabitants. The city is located on the eastern edge of the Randstad conurbation. Due to the central location within the Netherlands the city is an important transport hub.

The foundation date of the city is usually equated to the erection of a Roman castellum (Traiectum) as part of the Limes Germanicus around the year 50. The fort on the Rhine was abandoned in the third century. Around 650 the Franks build a church within the walls of the former Roman fortress which was quickly destroyed by the Frisians. In 732 the fortress of Traiectum -then known as Uut-Trecht- is bestowed on Willibrord the new Archbishop by Charles Martel. This is the real beginning of the present city. The settlement received city rights in 1122. The city was fortified with a wall and an outer moat with a canalised Rhine running through the city. Later the city was expanded and fortified in the Dutch manner with bulwarks and earthworks. In the nineteenth century these fortifications became obsolete and were demolished after the Nieuwe Waterlinie had been built east of the city in 1815. Combined with the railway -constructed in 1843- and new shipping channels -the Keulse Vaart of 1825 and the Merwede Kanaal of 1892- the centrally situated city grew quickly beyond the former city moat.

From 1880 onwards the city expanded in with working-class neighbourhoods such as Lombok (3), Ondiep (4) and Oudwijk, Wittevrouwen and Vogelenbuurt (1)  and middle-class neighbourhoods such as Elinkwijk (5), Tuindorp (2) and Oog in Al (3). Growth was especially rapid after WW2. The municipality of Utrecht doubled in size after parts of neighbouring Oudenrijn, Zuilen, Maartensdijk, Houten, De Bilt and Jutphaas were annexed in 1954. In the same year a structural plan was drawn up planning the growth of the city until 1970.  In this period several new suburbs were built like Kanaleneiland (1957-'71), Hoograven (1954-'65) and Overvecht (1960-'70). At the same time central government decided to spread urbanisation via new satellites around existing larger cities: the so-called urban growth centres (groeikernen). The first one designated was the New Town Houten in 1966. The New Town of Nieuwegein followed in 1971. In Utrecht the suburb of Lunetten (1976-'84) was built. The suburb of Maarsenbroek -adjacent to the Hooge Weide Industrial Estate was developed between 1972 and '86 as a new satellite of Utrecht (although never designated as a growth centre).



Utrecht knows a concentric urbanisation pattern. The old city of Utrecht (U) lies at the centre of the urban landscape. It is surrounded by neighbourhoods built before 1950 (1-5).The post-war suburb of Overvecht (6), Kaneleneiland (7), Hoograven (8) and Lunetten (9) and the University Campus Uithof (*) lie beyond. At some distance we find the expanded towns and villages of IJsselstein (IJ), Maarssen (M), De BIlt (B), Bilthoven (BH) and Zeist (Z) and de villages of Vleuten (v), De Meern (m), Bunnik (b and Odijk (o). At a similar distance we find the New Towns of Houten (10), Nieuwegein-Zuid / Vreeswijk (11) and Nieuwegein (12) and the suburb of Maarssenbroek (13). The most recent expansion is being built in Leidse Rijn (14), Vleuten-De Meern (15) and Houten-Castellum (16).

Other towns and villages around Utrecht also expanded rapidly after WW2. The small city of IJsselstein grew from the middle of the 1950s onwards and was even connected by a new tram to Utrecht via Nieuwegein. The villages of De Bilt and Zeist first saw the growth of villa parks for the well-off after WW1. Later they built small housing estates for working class people. After 1960 large scale expansion with high-rises was initiated, making both de facto satellites of  Utrecht, but with less affordable housing and a bigger portion of homeownership when compared to Houten and Nieuwegein.

In 1992 it was decided to expand Utrecht once again as the demand for housing and new employment areas was still strong. The focus of central government had shifted toward compact cities and it was decided to expand Houten and create a new suburb across the A2 motorway called Leidse Rijn and also build between Vleuten and De Meern. Work started in 1998 and is supposed to be finished by 2018.



The City of Utrecht comprises of the central city and a number of satellites that are either planned or have grown as a result of their proximity to the central city. The city is very compact, with only a few satellites truly separated from the central city, the rest is linked by vast employment areas and golf courses and parks.

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