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Richard Turkington ,Ronald van Kempen, Frank Wassenberg
High-rise Housing in Europe: current trends and future prospects
published by Delft University Press, 2004
The book is 300 pages and is illustrated.
Price: €49,95
ISBN 90-407-2483-0
Buying information
The book is available at Taylor
& Francis Group
The book is available at Amazon.com:

Book presentation
Whilst every country has its own house-building traditions, there
is only one truly European housing type. In the generation after
the Second World War,countries throughout Europe built high-rise
housing in the public sector as the ‘modern’ response
to acute housing shortage. Built after the Second World War as a
‘modern’ response to acute housing shortage, high-rise
housing was seen as a symbol of the new Europe in which the state
would cast off the constraints of the private market and create
new lifestyles in planned urban environments.North and south, east
and west, similar dreams were shared in different political cultures,
high-rise was as an expression of the new utopia. A generation later,
products which shared similar starting points have reached very
different positions. In some countries, high-rise is an entirely
normal housing type, in others, its role has been re-thought, whilst
in a third group, stigma has replaced its previous high status.
This book attempts to tell the story of high-rise housing in Europe,
from first thoughts to current realities and finally to future prospects.
Drawing on individual contributions from 15 countries, we are able
to identify how the original ideas were drawn up and communicated,
which countries were most influential, who led and who followed.
In the years between, we are able to trace the ‘careers’
of high-rise housing in different market conditions, not least through
the massive shift in Central and Eastern Europe from state socialism
to market capitalism. High-rise housing is unique in design and
construction and offers some flexibility within clear limitations.
How well has high-rise housing adjusted to changing demands over
the past 30, 40 or even 50 years? Finally, we are able to take stock
of high-rise in a Europe increasingly characterised by reduced state
provision and a growing faith in market dynamics, and where global
‘mega-trends’ are beyond the control of individual countries.
What are the prospects for high-rise housing in such a marketoriented
environment, what are its strengths and weaknesses, where are the
opportunities and what are the threats? What is clear is that, irrespective
of its status and quality, high-rise housing is here to stay. No
country is in a position to ignore this legacy of the post-war and
mass housing period. As intended, high-rise housing was built in
volume, not least in the former Soviet countries. We have to be
equipped to assess the contribution of high-rise housing and to
determine its future – this book is a major contribution to
developing this perspective.
About the editors
Richard Turkington (m) is Director of the Housing Vision Consultancy
and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Centre for Comparative Housing
Research, De Montfort University. He is an urban sociologist who
has been engaged with the high-rise issue for over a decade.
Ronald van Kempen (r) is Professor of Urban Geography at the Urban
and Regional research centre Utrecht, Faculty of GeoSciences, Utrecht
University, the Netherlands. His current research focuses on urban
restructuring, social exclusion, spatial segregation and the future
of large housing estates.
Frank Wassenberg (l) is a senior urban planner at the OTB Research
Institute for Housing, Urban and Mobility Studies, part of the Delft
University of Technology in the Netherlands. He is working on urban
renewal, housing markets, planning policies, high-rise and other
large housing estates and neighbourhood approaches.

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