Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier

In the Belgian context, the production of Public Mass housing remained limited in scope. Apart from a few well published examples Cité Modèle & Kiel (Braem), Luchtbal (Van Kuyck), Cité de Droixhe (Groupe EGAU), Belgian housing policies focused on the promotion of private homeownership. Mass hous...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tom Broes, Michiel Dehaene
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: DINÂMIA’CET – IUL, Centre for Socioeconomic and Territorial Studies 2017-03-01
Series:Cidades, Comunidades e Território
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cidades/292
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849735508590067712
author Tom Broes
Michiel Dehaene
author_facet Tom Broes
Michiel Dehaene
author_sort Tom Broes
collection DOAJ
description In the Belgian context, the production of Public Mass housing remained limited in scope. Apart from a few well published examples Cité Modèle & Kiel (Braem), Luchtbal (Van Kuyck), Cité de Droixhe (Groupe EGAU), Belgian housing policies focused on the promotion of private homeownership. Mass housing in Belgium took the form of the massive production of private houses, constituting a sprawled urban landscape that has been described as the ‘banlieue radieuse’. Less studied is the short lived but quantitatively significant private production of large scale high-rise apartments. This paper studies the close relationship between the production of these very different forms of ‘mass housing’: low- and high rise, inner-city and suburban. While the public policy context is rather well known, the private developers that produced this landscape have hardly been studied. This paper studies major players (Amelinckx n.v., Etrimo n.v., Extensa n.v.) and the architectural and development models through which they managed to create and capture a vast market of commodified housing. Through the detailed reconstruction of large scale commercial development schemes in Antwerp and Brussels, the paper describes the optimism of these mavericks of the Belgian property boom and recollects the radiant suburban promise they delivered.Although these property tycoons seem to have had little difficulty in luring in the middle classes and in persuading local political boards, today it becomes clear that the premises on the basis of which they sold the suburban dream were imbued with a thin instantaneous optimism that turned out to be too precarious to keep up with the subsequent impact of urbanization. While their activities are mostly remembered for the trauma of their bankruptcy, affecting many small contractors and private investors, this paper will highlight the collective failure to embed these large scale endeavours within enduring and intelligent (public) urban development strategies.
format Article
id doaj-art-3f4f4539e2a64fb49582f14eeab26ca9
institution DOAJ
issn 2182-3030
language English
publishDate 2017-03-01
publisher DINÂMIA’CET – IUL, Centre for Socioeconomic and Territorial Studies
record_format Article
series Cidades, Comunidades e Território
spelling doaj-art-3f4f4539e2a64fb49582f14eeab26ca92025-08-20T03:07:32ZengDINÂMIA’CET – IUL, Centre for Socioeconomic and Territorial StudiesCidades, Comunidades e Território2182-30302017-03-0133Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan FrontierTom BroesMichiel DehaeneIn the Belgian context, the production of Public Mass housing remained limited in scope. Apart from a few well published examples Cité Modèle & Kiel (Braem), Luchtbal (Van Kuyck), Cité de Droixhe (Groupe EGAU), Belgian housing policies focused on the promotion of private homeownership. Mass housing in Belgium took the form of the massive production of private houses, constituting a sprawled urban landscape that has been described as the ‘banlieue radieuse’. Less studied is the short lived but quantitatively significant private production of large scale high-rise apartments. This paper studies the close relationship between the production of these very different forms of ‘mass housing’: low- and high rise, inner-city and suburban. While the public policy context is rather well known, the private developers that produced this landscape have hardly been studied. This paper studies major players (Amelinckx n.v., Etrimo n.v., Extensa n.v.) and the architectural and development models through which they managed to create and capture a vast market of commodified housing. Through the detailed reconstruction of large scale commercial development schemes in Antwerp and Brussels, the paper describes the optimism of these mavericks of the Belgian property boom and recollects the radiant suburban promise they delivered.Although these property tycoons seem to have had little difficulty in luring in the middle classes and in persuading local political boards, today it becomes clear that the premises on the basis of which they sold the suburban dream were imbued with a thin instantaneous optimism that turned out to be too precarious to keep up with the subsequent impact of urbanization. While their activities are mostly remembered for the trauma of their bankruptcy, affecting many small contractors and private investors, this paper will highlight the collective failure to embed these large scale endeavours within enduring and intelligent (public) urban development strategies.https://journals.openedition.org/cidades/292Belgian Property BoomAmelinckxMetropolitan Urbanization
spellingShingle Tom Broes
Michiel Dehaene
Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier
Cidades, Comunidades e Território
Belgian Property Boom
Amelinckx
Metropolitan Urbanization
title Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier
title_full Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier
title_fullStr Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier
title_full_unstemmed Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier
title_short Real Estate Pioneers on the Metropolitan Frontier
title_sort real estate pioneers on the metropolitan frontier
topic Belgian Property Boom
Amelinckx
Metropolitan Urbanization
url https://journals.openedition.org/cidades/292
work_keys_str_mv AT tombroes realestatepioneersonthemetropolitanfrontier
AT michieldehaene realestatepioneersonthemetropolitanfrontier