Zionist Architecture and Town Planning. Nathan Harpaz

Zionist Architecture and Town Planning - Nathan Harpaz


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housing constructed by municipalities and cooperative societies. The shortage of urban workers’ housing accelerated by the end World War I, and the demands for reform intensified, too. As a result, more government financed construction was executed, but the main supplier remained the private market.34

      The topic of working class housing is discussed in two segments of this book. Architect Alexander Levy in his theoretical paper of 1920 designed a workers’ housing project for the city of Haifa, Israel. Levy’s plans for this proposed project were inspired directly by the German garden city movement before World War I regarding the distribution of the units, the choice of several “types” of units, and the use of standardized building materials. Another part of this book discusses cooperative housing implemented in the northern part of Tel Aviv during the 1930s. Most of these cooperative housing projects were designed by the architect Arieh Sharon, a graduate of the Bauhaus, and were initiated by the labor movement. Sharon’s design was influenced by European projects of grouping apartment buildings for the working class and the application of the International Style. They were similar to working class apartment complexes designed in Germany during the late 1920s and early 1930s by architects such as Walter Gropius and Hans Scharoun.

       Notes


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