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  • The Minimum Dwelling Revisited: CIAM's Practical Utopia (1928–31)

    The Minimum Dwelling Revisited by Kallis, Aristotle;

    CIAM's Practical Utopia (1928–31)

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Bloomsbury Visual Arts
    • Date of Publication 29 May 2025
    • Number of Volumes Paperback

    • ISBN 9781350346222
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages pages
    • Size 232x152x16 mm
    • Weight 380 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 36 bw illus
    • 666

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    Long description:

    This book provides an intellectual history of the modernist "minimum dwelling", exploring how early modernism saw mass housing as a primary vehicle for achieving the utopian transformation of society. It reappraises the often-overlooked 2nd and 3rd CIAM conferences (1929-31), addressing their engagement with the "minimum dwelling" and revealing them both as milestones in the organisation's annals and as seminal moments in the history of interwar modernism.

    In 1929, an eclectic international group of avant-garde modernist architects, including Ernst May, Mart Stam, Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier, met in Frankfurt for the second instalment of the CIAM conferences. They discussed a design programme for cost-effective, good-quality housing, seeking new approaches and processes to maximize quality and functionality while ensuring affordability for the wider population. In exploring the meaning and form of the 'minimum dwelling', they also re-defined dwelling as the hub of a new way of living, proposing a revolutionary multi-scalar approach to urban design based on the concept of the Existenzminimum ('optimally minimal housing').

    Despite the two conferences falling short of the organizer's expectations, and being overshadowed by later instalments, the participating architects sanctioned a semantic shift from minimum as bare necessity to a very different, aspirational, kind of minimalism - transforming the entire conversation on mass low-cost dwelling in design, social and ethical terms.

    Split into two parts, The Minimum Dwelling Revisited first takes a genealogical approach to explore the provenance of the concept of "minimum dwelling" prior to the 2nd and 3rd CIAM conferences, it then traces the proceedings of the two conferences themselves. Addressing the origins of the "minimum dwelling" concept but also its legacies, and serving as a corrective to the overemphasis on 4th CIAM conference and the Athens Charter, the book is essential reading for scholars researching urban design during the Interwar period.

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    Table of Contents:

    List of Illustrations
    Acknowledgments
    Abbreviations

    Introduction

    'Contact Zone' and 'Practical Utopia'
    Structure

    1. Genealogies of the Minimum

    Poverty, 'Human Needs', and 'Minimum'
    Habitation and 'Minimum Needs'
    Early Interventions and Reform Initiatives
    Existenzminimum
    The Low-cost Housing Calculus

    2. The 'Small Dwelling' Between Emergency and Aspiration

    Size and Dwelling
    The 'Small Dwelling' after WW1
    From the 'Small' to the 'Smallest' Dwelling (Kleinstwohnung)
    The Pioneering Cases of Vienna and Frankfurt

    3. International Expert Networks and The Housing Question in the Interwar Period
    The IFHTP Encounters the Question of Mass Housing: Vienna, 1926
    The IFHTP Congress in Paris, 1928: The Trope of the 'Housing For the Very Poor'
    The IFHTP Congress in Rome, 1929: Planning and Financing Mass Urban Housing

    4. The 'Minimum Dwelling' as Utopia
    WW1 as Rupture: The Space of Utopia
    Interwar Modernism as Discourse: Minimum and Optimum
    Architecture as Revolution
    The Private Cell, The Public Sphere, and What Lies In-Between
    The Soviet Experience: Pursuing the Minimum in Utopia
    The 'Dwelling Ration': Social Utopia in Disguise
    'Frictionless Living': The Studies of Alexander Klein

    5. CIAM2: The 'Minimum Dwelling' In Focus
    CIAM and its 'Lesser' Congresses
    CIAM's First Steps and the Question of Dwelling
    Setting Up the First 'Working Congress'
    The 1929 Frankfurt Congress (CIAM2)
    Language Matters: The Opacity of the Existenzminimum
    The Aftermath of the Frankfurt Congress

    6. CIAM3: Dwelling as the Unlikely Hub og Modern Architecture
    From CIAM2 to CIAM3: Exploring Scales in Three-Dimensional Space
    The Elusive Theme(s) of CIAM3: The Battle of the Scales
    The Brussels Congress
    The 'Minimum Dwelling' in CIAM3

    7. The CIAM2 and CIAM3 Exhibitions
    The Exhibition Field in Interwar Europe: Showcasing the 'Minimum'
    The Minimum Dwelling on Show: Exhibiting CIAM2
    Exhibiting CIAM3

    Conclusions

    Bibliography
    Index

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