The first garden city in Germany, Hellerau, was built
after the Dahlhauserheide Colony was built as a garden city satellite by the
Krupp Housing Department. As such this settlement isn’t a garden city as the
German Garden City Society wasn’t involved in its inception. Also Dahlhauserheide
in Hordel near Bochum was designed prior to Raymond Unwins book Town Planning
in Practice (1909), the German version of this book was published in 1922,
based on Sitte-esque spatial design principles. The whole garden city presents
itself as a built-up example of typical Unwinesque garden city design, but in
actual fact shows the deep influence of the German tradition of artistic urban
planning.
A typical street with semidetached houses and small
front gardens gives Dahlhauserheide a village-like feel. The straight streets
are always short in length, longer streets all have a gentle curve. The houses
are simple with high gable roofs , rendered walls and wooden window shutters on
the ground floor.
Some of the houses have sections of the facade half-timbered
in several patterns. Most of the timber-framing is used on the upper storey and
the gable end. This curved street shows how visual interest is created with the
same basic house repeated several times, but with different details (placement,
shape and size of windows, colour of render and use of timber frame panels).
Visual interest is also created by positioning the
blocks at a 45 degree angle at corners. Here the angled house is also given
extra emphasis by the use of half-timbering on the front facade.
In some places at tactical junctions green verges and
a set-back of the building line is used to widen the street space. The very low
gutter line of the semidetached block at the end of this widened space emphasises
this special point.
One of the long lightly curved streets. The end of the
street can’t be viewed from the beginning of it. The houses are all fairly similar
again with variations in the details. In some places the orientation of a
building is changed or the building line is set back or pushed forward.
The past of this garden city as a colony for miners
can be seen in some places. A wrought iron miner on the wall and an old,
restored coal cart on display in the front garden, or the hammer and pick
underneath the house number are evidence of this.
In some places a large green is created by a setback
of a long section of street. The semidetached houses are all linked by additions.
These used to be outbuildings like stables and sheds, now they are part of the
building. These houses show gable ends with weatherboarding in wood.
This weatherboarding can take several shapes. It can
be classic weatherboarding of slightly overlapping horizontal planks, as shown
above, but the planks can also be used vertically. Vertical weatherboarding is
used to great effect in some buildings, especially where horizontal trim ledges
are used (on the right) instead of the plane plank surface (left).
The park is a large green space that was included to
provide the residence with a communal green space and bring nature closer. This
was of great importance for people in the Reform Movement. The park isn’t flat
and therefore not really usable for outdoor sports; a separate sporting ground
with football pitches was built on the northern edge of Dahlhauserheide.
The architect Schmohl designed the houses in a
restrained vernacular style . He used few materials and found expressing in the
detailing, the different use of materials and scarce ornament like for instance
the horizontal trim ledges, small awnings over the front door and wooden
shutters on the ground floor.
Within the sea of semidetached and detached properties
with high roofs, the two storey blocks around the Beamtenplatz . This name
translates as Clerks Square and here at the heart of the garden city an informal
ensemble was built to house the Krupp Company clerks that worked in the nearby
collieries Hannibal and Hannover.
Arched gateways demarcate the entrances to the square.
The buildings are higher and therefore more imposing than the regular housing
for miners with lower roofs, that can be seen in the front framing the view.
Some buildings on the square are even higher with
three storeys and living space under the roof making four storeys and an attic.
These blocks were not intended for clerks or foreman -most of the foremen lived
in detached houses spread around the settlement so they could keep an eye on
the workers- but for the widows of miners that had perished in the pits.
The architecture is very expressive with sgrafito panels,
small roofs over the entrances, standing gale ends and protruding sections
creating visual interest and the idea of several buildings organically grown
around the small square with trees, lawns and a fountain.
These large semidetached houses are based on
Mulhouse-Quadragles. They had extra space for older parents to live in with
their relatives or rooms to let to a young man with no family of his own. The mines
attracted many immigrants and this meant an influx of mainly young men.
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