The entrance to the Cité Bon Air directly from the
main road is dominated by these blocks in striking architecture. The bright
buildings refer to German examples, which is clear in the roof treatment and
the use of concrete moulded stone on the facade aimed at resembling natural
stone.
This kind of architecture is typical for the period
around 1930. It is unclear when this part of the Cité was built, but judging by
the style of architecture it is the last part to have been completed, possibly
as early as the latter part of the 1920s. The architecture is in a distinct
modernist style best described as decorative functionalism. The door is
typically emphasised by a Dutch awning (left). Most of these blocks consist of
4 dwellings, some have 3 and a few have 2. Individual expression in painting
the window frames (seen on the right) rarely improves these buildings.
On streets where two building phases meet the contrast
is evident. On the left hand side we see the simple vernacular architecture of
the second phase with the contrasting modernist buildings on the right hand
side. The street with front gardens and small cherry trees is typical of garden
city movement principles.
The architecture of the first building phase is very
similar to that of the Cité de la Roue. To emphasise the rural location great
care has been taken to create long vistas out into the landscape from specific
point in the garden village. Here a view down the Rue de Bonheur towards the
forest at the edge of the Broekbeek valley. The brook itself is only visible from
its banks, never from a distance.
The Rue the Bonheur is typical of Unwinesque urban
design with a curving street picked up in the placement of the buildings on a
greater curve creating room for a broad
green verge with trees between the road and the front gardens on one side
making for a rural idyll.
A comparison between the architecture of the first
phase (left) on the Rue de l'Enthousiasme with that of the second phase (right)
on the Place Séverine shows similar architecture with simpler handling of the
building mass and fully rendered facades instead of a play with combinations of
brick and render. This is comparable to Cité de la Roue.
These buildings on the Rue Jean Lagey show the
simplified architecture of the second phase clearly. The first block still has
the characteristics of the first phase with the use of both brick and rendered
sections. As this road is part of the main structure of the street layout it is
not unthinkable that the long terrace was constructed in the first phase before
the rest of the housing in this part of the Cité.
The Place Séverine differs in layout with the rest of
the street plan. The stark orthogonal structure is emphasised in the placement
of the housing at right angles. The southside has an equally orthogonal setup
with a primary school and a kindergarten on the axis of the Avenue Auguste
Bourgeois.
The placement of a semidetached pair of houses in the
corner of a T-junction at an angle is a typical Unwinesque design device. So,
although the architecture of the second phase is altogether less attractive
some effort has been made to perpetuate the underlying ideal of creating a
rural idyll on the edge of the metropolis.
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