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result(s) for
"postwar housing"
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Atomic Dwelling
2012
In the years of reconstruction and economic boom that followed the Second World War, the domestic sphere encountered new expectations regarding social behaviour, modes of living, and forms of dwelling. This book brings together an international group of scholars from architecture, design, urban planning, and interior design to reappraise mid-twentieth century modern life, offering a timely reassessment of culture and the economic and political effects on civilian life.
This collection contains essays that examine the material of art, objects, and spaces in the context of practices of dwelling over the long span of the postwar period. It asks what role material objects, interior spaces, and architecture played in quelling or fanning the anxieties of modernism's ordinary denizens, and how this role informs their legacy today.
CITIES AND SUBURBS IN THE EISENHOWER ERA
Following World War II, Americans drastically changed how they built cities and how they used urban space for work, home, and play. Suburban growth and central city decline comprised two of the most pressing domestic challenges during Eisenhower's presidency. When Eisenhower took office, the nation was recovering from a severe postwar housing shortage. As middle‐class Americans created new communities on the urban rim, most turned their backs on the nation's declining city centers. During the Eisenhower era, the West epitomized the promises and perils of postwar suburban growth and metropolitan decentralization. By the mid‐1950s, cities had become the proving grounds for a national mass movement for African American civil rights. The simultaneous urbanization and politicization of Native Americans in the post‐ World War II period provides another striking example of how urban transformations sparked social movements that propelled the nation into the rights revolution of the 1960s.
Book Chapter
Rochdale Village and the Rise and Fall of Integrated Housing in New York City
2011
Rochdale Village was a limited-equity, middle-income cooperative. Its apartments could
not be resold for a profit, and with the average per room charges when opened of $21 a
month, it was on the low end of the middle-income spectrum. It was laid out on a massive
170-acre superblock development, with no through streets, and only winding pedestrian
paths, lined with newly planted trees, crossing a greensward connecting the twenty
massive cruciform apartment buildings. Rochdale was a typical urban postwar housing
development, in outward appearance differing from most others simply in its size. It
was, in a word, wrote the historian Joshua Freeman,
“nondescript.”
Book Chapter
Truman, Reconversion, and the Emergence of the Post‐World War II Consumer Society
by
Walker, Susannah
in
challenges of reconversion, Truman, chaotic adjustment following World War I
,
federal central planning in demobilization, Truman in the New Deal coalition
,
G.I. Bill and housing, bringing veterans into the postwar consumer market
2012
This chapter contains sections titled:
The Challenges of Reconversion
The New Deal Order and Consumerism in a Conservative Age
Price Controls
The G.I. Bill
Labor
Future Research and Bringing a Global Perspective to the Story
References
Book Chapter
Learning from Seoul: Public Rental Housing Development in South Korea and Its Implications for China’s Affordable Housing System Toward “Better Housing”
by
Yang, Li-Ping
,
Jun, Byung-Kweon
,
Wang, Xue-Rui
in
Affordable housing
,
Analysis
,
Architectural design
2025
In the context of China’s vigorous promotion of “better housing” construction, transforming affordable housing into “better housing” has become an important practical task. Since the 1960s, when the public housing system was standardized, South Korea has established a diversified and high-quality public housing supply system. Therefore, this study takes public rental housing in Seoul as examples, summarizes the development experience of public housing in South Korea, with the aim of providing new inspirations for the development direction, concepts, and spatial optimization of affordable housing in China. The research examines the Korean public housing policies, housing history, and cultural background from a theoretical perspective, analyzes the formation background and supply types of public housing, as well as the evolution mechanism of the unit plan, and takes typical public rental housing completed in the 2010s as examples to analyze and explore the spatial composition and structural characteristics of the affordable housing unit plans. Finally, based on China’s national conditions, this study highlights the policy implications of South Korea’s public housing experience for the development of affordable housing in China and proposes a “policy-space-culture” tripartite guidance framework to support the realization of the goal of constructing “better housing” within the affordable housing sector. Specifically, (1) at the policy level, it is recommended to establish a multi-tiered supply mechanism and implement an early warning system for emerging affordable housing demands; (2) at the spatial design level, standardization and modularization of housing design are advocated; and (3) at the cultural level, it is suggested to enhance cultural adaptability by aligning housing design with local residential culture and residents’ living habits.
Journal Article
Spectacular infrastructure and its breakdown in socialist Vietnam
2015
No material resource and public good is more critical to sustaining urban life than water. During postwar reconstruction in Vietnam, planners showcased urban infrastructure as a spectacular socialist achievement. Water-related facilities, in particular, held the potential for emancipation and modernity. Despite East German-engineered systems, however, taps remained dry in socialist housing. Lack of water exposed existing hierarchies that undermined the goal of democratic infrastructure yet enabled new forms of solidarity and gendered social practice to take shape in response to the state's failure to meet basic needs. Infrastructural breakdown and neglect thus catalyzed a collective ethos of maintenance and repair as the state shifted responsibility for upkeep to disenchanted tenants. I track these processes in a housing complex in Vinh City, where water signified both the promises of state care and a condition of its systemic neglect.
Journal Article
Good Housing for Good “Married Life”: Privacy, Transnational Anti-Communism, and Postwar Housing in South Korea
2022
This article examines postwar housing in South Korea as a transnational project in the Cold War milieu. Privacy (p’ŭraibŏshi) became a central architectural concern in South Korea after the Korean War (1950–53), as Korean architects negotiated their understanding of good, modern housing in the midst of deepening interactions with American architectural knowledge. A call for the construction of independent children's rooms was linked to the belief that good housing should also ensure the sexual privacy of the married couple. This article argues that architects construed privacy to be a value that was attached to liberal democracies and that reflected postwar fantasies and desires for a democratic living in contradistinction to its North Korean counterpart. In this way, housing became a site of transnational anti-communism, as architects and aspiring homeowners invested much energy in the ideological and material construction of privacy as a salient feature of modern housing.
Journal Article
Mismatches between the Supply and Demand of Public Rental Housing in Chinese Cities
2024
While many countries have witnessed the retreat of the state from social housing under neoliberalism, the Chinese government has taken the opposite trajectory, significantly expanding its involvement in public rental housing (PRH) over the past decade through substantial investments. However, the effectiveness of the PRH program has come under scrutiny due to its inability to meet the demand for housing units while grappling with a substantial vacancy rate. This study aims to unravel this paradox by utilizing a unique city-level database that encompasses information on public rental housing stock, land supply, waiting time, and allocation practices. The data suggest that there is a structural mismatch between supply and demand for PRH in China, with both high and low vacancy rates in different cities, and even high vacancy and high allocation rates co-existing in one city. The results of estimating the OLS regression model of PRH supply and demand indicate that the actual supply fails to align with the policy objectives and the actual housing demand. Rather, they are more a result of the power relationship between the central and local governments, and cities with high fiscal autonomy provide fewer PRH. Furthermore, local governments fail to set eligibility criteria in response to housing supply, demand, and allocation, further exacerbating the mismatch. This paper provides policy recommendations that aim to enhance the sustainability and effectiveness of the PRH program, contributing to more equitable urban development.
Journal Article