Prior to 1927 the area of Luchtbal was part of the
village of Ekeren. The southern section of what is now Luchtbal belonged to
Merksem. The brook called Vosscheschijn formed the border between the two. In
medieval times this was an important border as it was also the border between
the bishopric of Liège (Luik) and the
bishopric of Cambrai (Kamerijk). The area was named after a public house next
to the bridge on the Ekersesteenweg that crossed the Vosseschijn that was
renamed Luchtbal (literally: Sky Ball, an old name for Hot Air Balloon in Dutch) after one had
landed nearby in 1907. Shortly after a tram halt near the café was also named
Luchtbal, establishing the popular name for the area.
The polders between the Scheldt and Ekeren had
remained agricultural until the railway Antwerp-Rotterdam was built in 1852.
This was followed in 1870 by the building of the straight Noorderlaan to
replace the winding historic Ekerseweg. Due to the proximity of the expanding
Port of Antwerp, a new village grew along the new road from 1871 onwards in
what was at the time known as the Merksemse
polder. The population grew rapidly after a steam tram was built along the
Noorderlaan in 1887. In 1914 parts of Ekeren and Merksem were annexed by
Antwerp to excavate new docks.
On the site of the former English Army Camp, between
the Third Albert Dock and the railway line, a new garden village was planned
from 1924 onwards. The first phase of this so-called Tuinwijk Luchtbal was completed between 1925 and 1929. To
commemorate the former army camp all the streets in this new garden village
were named after British and American cities. The garden village was developed
by the Maatschappij voor Goedkope Huisvesting (Society for Affordable Housing) in several types along often curved
streets. Corner plots were designated for corner shops. Next to the garden
village an new church (Our Lady Annunciation 1927) and a free school for boys
and girls (Vrije jongens- en
meisjesschool 1930) were built. This harbour suburb was situated halfway
between Ekeren and Merksem next to the Port of Antwerp but at some distance
from the city itself. Allotments were not part of the scheme, as is so often
the case in Belgium. There were however playing fields for football provided
along the Noorderlaan. During the 1930s a secondary school (Stedelijke
Scholengroep 1938) was built. At that time a large apartment complex inspired
by Austrian examples was built near the Second Albert Dock further south. This Canadablock (1938-'39) was developed by S. V. Onze Woning (Social Housing
Collective Our House).
The large area of Luchtbal comprises of a northern and
southern section. Each can be subdivided in neighbourhoods with their own
character and architecture. Luchtbal, before redevelopment, consisted of a
garden village in the northern section with a church (+), free school (F),
secondary school (S), playing fields (pf) and a park (P). After WW2 the
so-called Darsen-blocks (D) were added in the undeveloped parts of the garden
village. The southern section also dates from after WW2, except for the
Canada-blocks (C) right at the heart of this area. Next to these apartment
blocks a small shopping centre was built (sc) with a new church and activity
centre to the north (A). Directly nect to the garden village 6 tower blocks
were erected (T) together with a traditionalist catholic school called the
Annunciation Institute (M - Maria Boodschap Instituut). On the southern edge the 4 long blocks (L)
were built. Around a large athletics track a sports hall (sh), theatre (th),
secondary school (ss) and primary school (ps) were built. The open space is
mirrored on the northside of the Canada-blocks by a large garden square (sq).
After WW2 the war damage had to be repaired. After
these works had mostly finished the Antwerp city council started a program of
providing new and better housing in areas that had remained undeveloped within
the city limits. One such area was Luchtbal where from the 1950s onwards two
housing associations -S.V. Onze Woning in
the southern part and S.M. Huisvesting
(Social Society for Housing) in the northern part- were active in building
large amounts of social housing between the Noorderlaan and the railway. In
line with then prevalent opinions on modern housing the council advocated
CIAM-style housing in a mix of middle-rise and high-rise apartment blocks.
Four so-called Lange
Blokken (Long Blocks - 1954-'56) and six Torengebouwen (Tower buildings - 1960-'62) were built in the
southern part after designs by H. van Kuyck. He also designed the terraced
housing built in 1955 in the Columbiastraat. A central shopping centre was
added in 1958. In the northern part of Luchtbal the new additions were directly adjacent to the old garden village
and the architects took a different approach by designing brick-skinned blocks
of flats of 4 to 5 storeys high. These so-called Darsenblokken are all arranged around a large communal parklike
garden. Directly south of the garden village sympathetic terraced houses and
some blocks of elderly housing were built. These have since been torn down to
make way for rather fashionable apartment buildings.
The housing in the harbour suburb of Luchtbal has
always been at the forefront of what was considered modern housing at the time.
The result is a number of urban fragments that sit alongside each other but
have little to do with one another. Thus the whole is not valued for what it
is. Because most of the housing in Luchtbal is social rented accommodation, the
city council wishes to redevelop this area by introducing owner-occupied new
housing. This approach is common in the Low Countries as it improves
neighbourhood statistics in deprived areas. The pressing fact, however, is that
there is too little social housing available as it is...
Luchtbal is a very diverse urban area that is
comprised of several neighbourhoods that equate to a fragmented urban
landscape. The main reason for this is that in every development phase the new
buildings were built according to what was considered modern at that time. As
such the area provides a perfect
pattern-card of the changing ideas in urban design from the 1920s until now.
The garden city inspired harbour suburb of the northern section can still be
reconstructed from the pattern, although it is under great pressure from
redevelopment thus probably rendering it
a few urban fragments in the future.
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