The Great War ended in 1918. With it the
Austrian-Hungarian dual monarchy also ceased to exist. This lead to the
independent development of many nations in central Europe. Austria became a
republic as the monarchy was denounced on November 12 1918. At the following
elections in which all citizens of legal age had a right to vote and the Social
Democratic Party gained an absolute majority in the capital Vienna. Jakob
Reumann was elected the first social democratic mayor. He was succeeded by Karl
Seitz in 1923. Until the forced
Anschluss with Nazi-Germany in 1938 Vienna was nicknamed Rotes Wien (Red
Vienna).
The collapse of the Austrian Empire created
hyperinflation an poverty, triggered a refugee crisis (German-speaking people
from Hungary, Galicia, Romania and Moravia fled their homeland) and left the
large capital city at the head of a much smaller country. Vienna was also no
longer located central in the empire, but right on the edge of the new Republic
of German-Austria.
Vienna however was also a city of creative minds and
intellectuals. The changed situation also incited optimism and a sense of new
possibilities for modernisation. The social democratic politicians and the
affiliated unions pushed for a radical agenda of (local) government-lead
intervention and provision for all residents and the less well-off in particular. Creating
public housing projects became the main concern of the Social Democrats in
Vienna. For this they made use of the Imperial Tenant Protection Act (Mieterschutzgesetz) passed in 1917 that
froze the rent of flats at the level of 1914. This made new private housing
development unprofitable. As a result no new housing was planned, although the
demand for affordable flats grew extremely high. The 1919 Housing Requirement
Act kick-started extensive public housing planning by the city administration. This
was supported by the decision to create the capital Vienna as a separate
province in 1921. The prices for land and the cost of labour and materials were
low as a result of the complete standstill in construction. House building
started in earnest in 1923 with the first complexes of affordable Most housing
was completed after 1925 when the strong new Schilling currency replaced the devalued Krone.
All these things contributed to Vienna become a
socialist laboratory for social reform and public housing provision. As such
this short period in Austrian history has attracted much attention in the past,
and is arguably still relevant when viewing the problems with housing provision
in the Western World. The social housing, that took the shape of blocks of
flats with few types of standardised
flats typically built around a communal garden, was designed and developed by
the Viennese city administration. The program was funded by the Viennese
Housing Tax (40%), federal funds and a Luxury Tax. No money was borrowed to
make house building possible. Using public money meant that rents could be kept
very low. For the low-paid rents was set at only 4% of their household income.
In contrast in privately rented accommodation over 30% of household income
could be spent on rent. Furthermore if tenants become ill or unemployed rent
could be waved or payment could be postponed.
In total the local government constructed 400 housing
complexes with some 64.000 units (nearly always flats, but some terraces were
also realised) and several amenities like a bathhouse, laundry, schools,
community rooms, shops, playgrounds, maternity care, doctors surgery, etcetera.
With over 10% of the population of Vienna living in these Gemeindebauten (Communal Houses) the true scale of the program
becomes evident. The improvements in public health were enormous. So too were
advances the in level of schooling and workers productivity. The number of
people designated destitute fell dramatically.
The building campaign also become divisive as an
expression of the political agenda of the left that contrasted sharply with the
conservative mindset of surrounding rural Austria. During the civil war of
February 1934, “Red Vienna” came to a sudden, tragic end, as the socialists’
enemies fired on the Karl-Marx-Hof -one of the emblematic projects- and drove
the party and its leader’s underground, often into exile. Vienna's communal
housing remain both as a symbol and a strategy. In effect these bastion-like
mega-blocks stood isolated in a bourgeois city that longed for times gone by
and were only occupied by people who supported their construction. They
function still however as affordable housing and are managed by the city's
authorities. As such they are more than expressions of municipal socialism, but
a possible pragmatic example of solving a large-scale housing crisis. The
workman's utopia was never realised in Vienna, but the city was reshaped to
include people of all incomes in a comfortable and economic way. So let's not
focus on the socialist ideals underpinning this housing program but seek
inspiration in the knowledge that it is possible to build affordable housing in
large quantities without deferring the costs to later generations by massive
third-party financing.
These Gartenhof complexes are located around the old
city of Vienna as satellites. They combine the ideas of the garden city
movement (so enthusiastically embraced by socialists and reformers alike) with
the Mietskaserne en Mietshof. The result is the Gartenhof with amenities as
seen in Austria, Germany, The Netherlands and even England. All the Gartenhof apartment
complexes still exist in Vienna. Most are also aesthetically very pleasing.
Tours are organised to some of the better known examples, amongst them the Carl Seitz Hof (or Gartenstadt Floridsdorf).
No comments:
Post a Comment