1st Edition

Sustainable Collective Housing Policy and Practice for Multi-family Dwellings

By Lee Ann Nicol Copyright 2013
    200 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    200 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Housing stocks provide much more than just shelter. Energy suppliers, pension fund managers and public transit providers are but a few of the many stakeholders that have a regulated interest in the non-shelter goods and services offered by housing. Such stakeholders and their activities are traditionally addressed on a sectoral basis, yet regulations that are designed to apply to one often have unintended effects on another, effects that may produce negative pressure on the housing stock – and the wider built environment – in terms of sustainability.

    Sustainable Collective Housing presents a new and comprehensive approach to the study of the regulations pertaining to housing: the institutional regimes framework. By considering the housing stock as a resource, this framework enables the ensemble of public policies, property rights and contracts that govern all shelter and non-shelter uses of housing to be identified, analyzed and evaluated. Using examples from Switzerland, Germany and Spain, this book describes the regulatory conditions that must be in place before housing sustainability issues can be effectively tackled. The book will provide policy-makers, housing stock owners and other stakeholders with the knowledge and tools to make rational and legitimate decisions regarding housing sustainability.

    1. Introduction  2. Context  3. The Institutional Regime for the Study of Housing Sustainability  4. Applying the Institutional Regimes Framework to Study Housing Stock Sustainability  5. Case Study Descriptions  6. How Changes in Regime Affect Management Strategies and the Use of Housing Goods and Services  7. The Relationship between Regime and Housing Sustainability  8. Prioritizing Shelter and the Importance of Non-housing Goods and Services  9. Key Fndings and Conclusions

    Biography

    Lee Ann Nicol is a research associate at ETH CASE – the Centre for Research on Architecture, Society & the Built Environment at ETH Zurich. With a background in engineering and urban planning, her research interests lie in sustainable urban development, specifically the institutional considerations of sustainability in the housing sector.