2022
DOI: 10.17645/up.v7i1.4811
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Brutalism and Community in Middle Class Mass Housing: Be’eri Estate, Tel Aviv, 1965–Present

Abstract: Fostering functioning, place-based communities has been a major concern in architecture and planning circles since the mid-1950s revolving the issue of habitat. Using the ethics of European New Brutalism, in Israel the architectural discourse locally developed a Team 10 critique of CIAM, addressing community as the main challenge of modern housing. The failure of modern mass housing to foster viable communities is associated with, and arguably triggered by, the global shift from state-sponsored to market housi… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…De Vos and Spoormans (2022) study the evolving vocabulary used for collective housing in Belgium and the Netherlands, as local traditions and contemporary policy place collective dwelling again on the agenda of architecture and planning. Allweil and Zemer (2022) examine the confluence of New Brutalist architecture and the consolidation of market-produced middle-class housing estates. The article looks at a large, Team 10 inspired estate in Tel Aviv as an arena for exploring the architectural ethics enabling the persistence of a middle-class community.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…De Vos and Spoormans (2022) study the evolving vocabulary used for collective housing in Belgium and the Netherlands, as local traditions and contemporary policy place collective dwelling again on the agenda of architecture and planning. Allweil and Zemer (2022) examine the confluence of New Brutalist architecture and the consolidation of market-produced middle-class housing estates. The article looks at a large, Team 10 inspired estate in Tel Aviv as an arena for exploring the architectural ethics enabling the persistence of a middle-class community.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%