Description
In the twenty-first century, housing has become a site of ecological experimentation and environmental remediation. From the vantage point of contemporary architecture, conservation concerns and emergent building science technologies support one another, with new processes and materials deployed to reduce energy usage, water consumption, and carbon dioxide emissions. Landscapes of Housing examines this trend in historical perspective, arguing for a more considered environmental vision that includes the organic, social, and cultural dimensions of landscape. By shifting the focus from architecture, the book highlights and critiques the relationship between dwelling and landscape itself. Contributors from a wide range of international perspectives propose a more integrative ecology that includes history, culture, society, and materiality, in addition to technology, within contemporary ecological housing programs. This book will be a resource for upper-level students, academics, and researchers in landscape architecture interested in the social and political implications of ecological housing.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Housing and/as Landscape
Jeanne Haffner
Part I: Shaping Society
1. "This Scene Is Itself Living": Human Geography and the Ecologies of Dwelling, 1870–1970
Peter Ekman
2. The Chicago Alternative: Vernacular Forms for the Garden City
Daniel Bluestone
3. From Ecology to Pathology: The Landscapes of Midcentury Public Housing and the Shifting Grounds of Environment and Health
Sara Jensen Carr
4. From Garden Settlement to Cooperative Economy: Housing, Labor, and Socialization Theory in Vienna and Berlin, 1920–1925
Sophie Hochhäusl
5. Environmental Speculations: Landscape Suburbanism between Housing and Planning, 1920s–1940s
Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago
Part II: Shaping Individuals
6. "Not Just Barberry:" A Political Ecology of the Swedish "Concrete Suburbs," 1960–1981
Jennifer Mack
7. Expanding Danish Welfare Landscapes: Steen Eiler Rasmussen and Tingbjerg Housing Estate
Ellen Braae and Henriette Steiner
8. Letting the Dust Settle: The Landscapes of Open Space in the Model Housing Developments QT8, Milan, and Hansaviertel, West-Berlin
Sonja Dümpelmann
9. French Housing and the Environment, 1945–1975: From Public Health to Private Space
Nicole C. Rudolph
Part III: Shaping the Environment
10. Reciprocal Interaction: Architecture and Landscape in the Early Work of Ian McHarg
Kathleen John-Alder
11. Roberto Burle Marx and the Modern Gardens of Brazilian Social Housing
Catherine Seavitt Nordenson
12. Supermeasurement for Superarchitecture: Rethinking Landscape, Building Technology, and Dwelling for the Twenty-first Century
Terri Peters



