HUDCO housing, India, Asia
 
Year1989latitude: ° 0'
longitude: ° 0'
Period
Initiator(s)
Planning organization
Nationality initiator(s)
Designer(s) / Architect(s)
Design organization
Inhabitants
Target population
Town website
Town related links
Literature

type of New Town: > scale of autonomy
New-Town-in-Town
Satellite
New Town
Company Town
> client
Private Corporation
Public Corporation
> policy
Capital
Decentralization
Industrialization
Resettlement
Economic
 
'The housing for the Neemuch Improvement Trust in Mandsaur District in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh was designed predominantly for the less well-off sectors of society, but also partly for the middle income group. Its 178 dwelling units were conceived and constructed with the aim of assuring a good standard of living and providing reasonable facilities, adequate and equitable distribution of infrastructure, and suitable open spaces. Row and cluster housing has been developed with common walls, and all houses are provided with front and back yards. Dwellings at first floor level are given access to an open terrace via an outside stairway. The houses were built of local stone and with local labour, thus achieving very high cost savings.

Each type of cluster was given its own open space. The overall environment results from the hierarchy established by these open spaces, which range from individual terraces and front/back yards to cluster open spaces. Their continuum throughout the scheme is established by pathways that link the various spaces.


The main building materials - rubble and limestone slabs - are indigenous to the region and have been used for centuries. As a result the locals are well versed in their usage. The stones and slabs came from a quarry about 20 kilometres from the site and were used cut and dressed to various specified sizes depending on anticipated usage. The method of construction was very similar to that used for pre-cast concrete, but in a natural form, and did not require any sophisticated equipment. All work was done manually on the site.' (quote from source). IT IS INTERESTING HOW THIS PROJECT IS BOTH A MODERN HOUSING PROJECT FOR THE POOR AND HOW IT AT THE SAME TIME IS VERY CLOSE TO THE TRADITIONAL BUILDING METHODS AND MATERIALS. FROM THE IMAGES IT LOOKS ALMOST LIKE THE HOUSES WERE NEVER REALLY FINISHED AND THAT PEOPLE JUST MOVED IN.

source: http://archnet.org/library/sites/one-site.tcl?site_id=1682

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