Monday, November 21, 2016

Am Schmalen Rain, Gotha: an isolated ensemble by a building cooperative


This horse shoe shaped garden village is an excellent example of the 1920s German Genossenschaftswohnungsbau (cooperative house building) that was influenced by the Garden City Movement. Baugenossenschaften (building cooperatives) predate the Garden City Movement (and served as an inspiration). The first of these cooperatives was founded in 1867 in Prussia with the aim of providing affordable housing for its members. The financial crash at the end of the nineteenth century meant that most wouldn't survive for very long. The model of housing provision by means of building cooperatives picked up again after 1905 and especially after 1918 in de German-speaking world.

In 1909 the Gothaer Baugenossenschaft für Beamte und Arbeiter der Eisenbahnverwaltung (Gotha Building Cooperative for Officials and Workers of the Railway Company) was founded. In the same year a plot of land was acquired south of the railway tracks and the so-called Alte Kolonie (Old Colony) was built along a few cul-de-sacs. Between 1909 and 1926 the number of houses was expanded by building westwards in small developments of a few blocks each spread along new streets that followed or connected to former country lanes.

After an urban expansion plan was drawn up for the city of Gotha in 1923, urban expansion became less haphazard and separate development were align within an overarching spatial plan. The southern edge of the city was designated as suitable for development, so in 1925 the local council and the Supervisory Board of the Building Cooperative agreed a new housing development here. This next development was aimed at a broader range of people than merely railway employees.

The housing estate was designed by the architects Richard Neuland, Bruno Tamme and the Regierungsbaumeister (Governmental Architect) Pfitzmann. The estate was named Am Schmalen Rain after a fieldname that indicated the position along a narrow border ditch, which still runs along the edge today as the Ratsrinne. The designers were asked to consider the exceptional situation of a quiet urban border area, to create a good arrangement of traffic conditions for a housing development of 150 to 200 units with a "centre area" and stores for the supply of local residents, and also take into account the garden city idea. This last condition refers more to the German Garden City (a garden village combined with allotments and amenities) than to the true Garden City (which was basically a suburban satellite between city and countryside).

The executives involved made significant changes to the first plan and decided that all three architects should design a section of the estate to avoid monotony. In the first budget for the new housing estate 161 housing units, 3 business premises, 1 restaurant and an office for the manager of the cooperative were included. For the build only local contractors and workers were employed. Construction started in 1926 and the topping out ceremony for the first houses was held in 1927. After this -to make savings- the number of housing units was first raised to 190 and later to 202. Initially apartment blocks were added to the scheme. Housing originally intended as terraced housing was additionally split in 2 apartments. This resulted in a total of 269 housing units (in 1935). This meant that in the houses originally built as family housing the two inserted apartment tenants had to share the bathroom. The estate held 12 bedsits, 146 one bedroom flats, 95 two bedroom flats, 15 three bedroom houses and 1 four bedroom house.



The estate  Am Schmalen Rain was developed as an ensemble around a series of public spaces (streets, a large square -S- and a small park with playground -P). The buildings envelop the public, shared, space and also dominates the streetscape. At the centre the community block (C) that once housed the amenities. To the west a large allotment (A) was built for the residents. On the east the narrow stream Ratsrinne (R)  is the Schmaler Rain that gave its name to the neighboring field and thus to the housing estate. Typical for 1920s examples are the gate buildings and arched gateways (G).

Due to financial difficulties during the 1930s the estate was never expanded further south, as was originally intended. Although called Gartenstadt Am Schmalen Rain, this estate isn't a collection of semidetached cottages along road planted with fruit trees as most people would typify a garden village. Am Schmalen Rain is a good example of the very German translation of Garden City Ideas into a specific more closed version that combines terraced housing, apartments and amenities. Such spatial ensembles are similar to the Gartenhof complexes that are completely comprised of flats. They should be typified as halfway between suburban and urban. There are many examples in Germany and Austria. The more urban 1920s-30s housing complexes in the Netherlands also follow this German model. Space for gardening was set aside by planners and developed as allotments. Allotment complexes still form an integral part of the German urban landscape. The complex has -almost entirely- been renovated with the bright colours of the facades, window shutters and the family housing of the terraces reinstated. The residents are very proud of their lovely historic housing estate and were keen to point out the improvements made and share their knowledge of the history of this place. Well worth a visit when one is travelling to for instance Weimar!

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