Thursday, August 22, 2013

Factory housing: Tuindorp Vooruit, Ede



In 1913 the ENKA factory producing artificial silk started production in the city of Arnhem. The name of this artificial fiber producer is an abbreviation of Eerste Nederlandse Kunstzijdefabriek Arnhem (literally: First Dutch artificial silk manufacture Arnhem). Because of a lack of room for expansion on the Arnhem-site the company bought a secondary site in Ede in 1919. A large plot of heathland was acquired along the railway connecting Utrecht and Arnhem. The small village of Ede had been designated as a location for housing several garrisons of the Dutch land forces in 1900. This lead to a subsequent expansion of the small farming village located on the edge of the Veluwe hills and an impoldered floodplain (the Binnenveld).

Ede was considered a favourable location for the second ENKA factory as the land was cheap, there was plenty of clean water rising at the foot of the hills and the railway connected the site to the mayor urban centres in both the Netherlands and Prussia.  There were few skilled laborers available in the area. So from the onset the plan was to build a factory with housing and amenities for factory personnel. The local council agreed to the sale of the land. The construction of 300 houses for factory workers to be built as a garden village was included in the deed.  This Dutch variant of the garden city model was advocated by council members who were greatly influenced by 't Lansink in Hengelo.

The ENKA company founded the Woningbouwvereniging Vooruit (literally: building society Forwards) in 1919. This building society stood under company control, with the local council as a board member on paper. Through this construction the company could build the housing it needed within the Woningwet*. The name that was chosen for this building society speaks volumes of the intensions behind it.



The complete factory village was constructed in several phases and comprises the ENKA factory in the east (shown in violet), a row of villas for higher management (shown in dark green), a public park, a playground, a school, sporting grounds, a small villa park with some detached and semidetached houses for middle management (amber) and two workers colonies with a few houses for the overseers (shown in red). An older road (a so-called Grindweg) separates the factory site from the various housing areas. East of the factory the HORA-park (HORA is an acronym of: Herstelingsoord voor Rustbehoevende Ambtenaren, literally Convalescence Home for Civil Servants in need of Repose) was built in 1922.

In November 1920 the first building phase of 150 dwellings was approved by the local council. By December 1922 all houses were occupied. The project, designed by the architects Van der Burgh and Eschauzier was never intended to be a complete model community. The garden village focused solely on housing, no amenities or shops were included. The garden village is however part of a socially stratified neighbourhood that also included a small villa park and the Reehorst (a theatre and cinema venue that sat in a large strolling park and is comparable to the Casino often seen in Germany). With the completion of the second building phase in 1925 some shops were added together with another 150 dwelling. In 1934 a large school was built between the two phases. Architecturally the components differed greatly. Only the school and the larger part of phase 1 still remain. The buildings have been given heritage status. Phase 2 has been demolished and replaced with new buildings in a similar style.

*The Woningwet (Housing Act) of 1901 sought to improve the living conditions of all Dutch people and focused on both rental and owner-occupied housing. The Housing Act prescribed minimal standards for new housing and made state advances and contributions available to building societies. This lead to many companies founding building societies that were only independent in name.

No comments:

Post a Comment