Tower block
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Template:Cleanup-tone Image:Cwmbran tower block.jpg Image:Russian stairwell.JPG Image:Moscow strogino.jpg Image:Mamut 1.jpg Image:Tenstabetong.jpg A tower block, block of flats or apartment block is a high-rise apartment building. Tower blocks were first built in the UK after the Second World War, in many cases as a "quick-fix" to cure problems caused by crumbling and insanitary 19th Century dwellings or to replace buildings destroyed by aerial bombing. Initially, they were welcomed, and their excellent views made them popular living places. Later, as the buildings themselves deteriorated, they grew a reputation for being undesirable low cost housing, and many tower blocks saw rising crime levels, increasing their unpopularity. One response to this was the great increase in the number of housing estates built, which in turn brings its own problems. In the UK, tower blocks particularly lost popularity after the partial collapse of Ronan Point in 1968. The city of Glasgow in Scotland contains the highest concentration of tower blocks in the UK, and also some of the most notorious of such developments - examples include the derided Hutchensontown C blocks in the Gorbals, and the tallest tower blocks in Europe - the 31-storey Red Road flats in the city's north east, which have recently been earmarked for demolition.
The unpopularity of tower blocks in the UK is in marked contrast to many other countries. In Singapore and urban Hong Kong, for example, land prices are so high that almost the entire population lives in high rise apartments. Similarly, high land prices continue to encourage apartment tower construction in New York City (especially Manhattan).
One of the advantages of apartment blocks is that they decrease the costs of infrastructure development (water, power, roads, public transportation) as opposed to low-rise suburban houses.
Buildings containing low numbers of flats or apartments, or which are low-rise buildings such as tenement buildings, are described in apartment building. However in the United States all buildings are referred to as "apartment" buildings regardless of their size.
In recent years, some council or ex-council high-rises in the United Kingdom, including Trellick Tower, Keeling House and The Barbican Estate, have become popular with young professionals due to their excellent views, desirable locations and architectural pedigrees, and now command high prices. After a gap of around 30 years, new high-rise flats are once again being built in Glasgow, London, Leeds, Manchester and Liverpool, this time for wealthy professionals. They are often referred to by the American term 'Apartment Buildings', particularly by the developers, perhaps in an effort to distance these newer buildings from the older Tower Blocks from the 1950s and '60s.
Tower blocks were utilised by socialist governments to provide affordable housing for its citizens. Most of them are in countries like Russia, China and Brazil, and provide the bulk of public housing. Modern, well maintained commieblocks are very clean, comfortable and prove to be excellent housing type with many advantages over urban sprawl.
Such housing plans become popular during the presidency of Nikita Khrushchev in USSR. Here is the popular quote of Khrushchev on this matter:
- We must select a smaller number of standard designs .. and conduct our mass building programs using only these designs over the course of, say, five years .. and if no better designs turn up, then continue in the same way for the next five years.
- What's wrong with this approach, comrades? Template:Fact
Ideal socialist cities were built around Central and Eastern Europe, like Dunaújváros in Hungary and Ostrava in former Czechoslovakia. These cities show that one can find national influences in them as well, as in Nowa Huta, Poland. Czech renaissance sculpture and imagery exists in Ostrava in what could be called, "Soviet imperialist grandeur with local additives." [8] The streets were made just a little too wide in Dunaújváros, highlighting the reality of "things are beyond your control… keep that in mind." Hungarian incorporation of the Danube and decent central planning in Dunaújváros (meaning ‘'New Danube Town’' make this city one of the success stories of socialist planning, though gives the impression that one is living in a large kingdom, ruled by the Soviets.[9] A Soviet ‘pure socialist’ city called Magnitogorsk was brought to life in Stalin’s first 5 Year Plan, and was built on a ‘linear model’ for short commutes from flat to work and back, with varying success. Here the cold of winter made a linear pattern ridiculous, turning nature "into just another source of hostility." [10]
If for no other reason, and there are plenty, East European blocks of flats are considered uniquely abhorrent because of the sheer volume of their presence upon the modern urban landscape, always appearing as they do in some sharp geometric forms somewhere between a solid cube and a three dimensional rectangle, be it vertically or horizontally oriented. The Berlin based European Academy of the Urban Environment estimates that,
- Large estates with prefabricated apartment blocks are the outstanding characteristic of the cities of the former communist countries. In total it is estimated that some 170 million people live in more than 70 million flats, usually in large housing complexes on the outskirts of cities.[11]
Thus, from Szczecin on the Baltic to Trieste on the Adriatic, and from Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin to Vladivostok on the Pacific coast, 170 million people wake up looking at what are essentially Le Corbusier’s "machines for living in".[12]
Other names
The name commieblock (Communal Blockhouse) has recently come into use to refer to a standardised tower block with serial design, often highrise apartment used for public housing.
See also
- Brutalist architecture - an architectural style that spawned from the modernist architectural movement and which flourished from the 1950s to the 1970s.
- Gemeindebau - large scale public housing in Austria
- Prefabrication
- Panelák - the equivalent in Czechoslovakia
- Plattenbau - the equivalent in East Germany
- Cutie de chibrituri - meaning Matchboxes in Romanian is the equivalent in Romania
External links
- Sustaining Tower Blocks
- World's tallest residential towers
- East European blocks of flats todayde:Wohnblock