Sixties High-rise in Holland

Success and failure

Review (2020)
Author(s)

F. D. Van Der Hoeven (TU Delft - 100% Research, TU Delft - Urban Design)

Research Group
100% Research
Copyright
© 2020 F.D. van der Hoeven
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.51461/projectbaikal.66.1734
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
Multiple languages
Copyright
© 2020 F.D. van der Hoeven
Research Group
100% Research
Issue number
66
Pages (from-to)
149-156
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

During the 1960s, radical ideas emerged in Dutch urban planning. For the first time, the two major cities in the Netherlands engaged in building high-rise residential districts. If we understand this period as an experiment, then the cities of Amsterdam and Rotterdam produced opposite but exciting results. The uncompromising Amsterdam Bijlmermeer district grows into a problem area of national proportions. The more moderate Rotterdam Ommoord district, however, will be doing just fine. This article places the initial urban design features of those districts side-by-side for comparison. It provides insights into which design solutions work and which doesn't.