1st Edition
Modelling Social Housing Exploring the Interplay of Social Life and Built Environments on European Social Housing Estates
List of figures
List of contributors
1. Introduction: Exploring the Modelling Capacities of Social Housing
Mikkel Høghøj, Mette My Madsen, Anne Corlin and Morten Nielsen
Part I: Inventing and implementing new models of housing
2. A Danish Kasbah? The Mediterranean-Islamic Homes and Town Centres as Models of Danish Dense-Low Housing (1950s–1980s)
Dorian Bianco
3. Everything in Its Right Place: Henry Roberts’ Model Houses and the Fabrication of the Model Family
Joshua Tan
4. Planning, Play, and Participation: The Extra-Parliamentary Residents’ Playground at Høje Gladsaxe (1969) as a Model for Sociospatial Transformation and Engaging Urban Citizenship
Martin Søberg
Part II: Scales and complexity of planning and design
5. Model Assemblages: Arranging for Multiplicity in Stockholm's 1952 General Plan
Sued Ferreira and Johan Pries
6. An Architecture of Paperwork: The London County Council’s Collaborative Bureaucracy
Jesse Honsa
7. Ecocritical Domography
Antonio Bernacchi and Alicia Lazzaroni
Part III: Contemporary projects of intervention and transformation
8. Artistic Interventions in Large-scale Urban Transformation Projects
Line Marie Bruun Jespersen and Rune Christian Bach
9. The Role of Private Developers in the Social Transformation of Social Housing Estates
Anne Clementsen
10. Reconfiguring Orders of Worth: A Comparative Analysis of Densification Processes of Social Housing Estates in Denmark and Japan
Nicola C. Thomas
Part IV: Everyday appropriations and resident practices
11. Mimicking Municipal Models: The Potentials and Pitfalls of Resident-Driven Development in Forced Regeneration of Danish Non-Profit Housing
Adam Veng
12. Whose Place is it? Remodelling and Reappropriating Danish Social Housing
Marie Stender
13. Social Housing Beyond the City: Migration and Remote Productions of Welfare on the Danish Island of Lolland
Trine Brinkmann
14. Epilogue: Models that Make us Act
Albena Yaneva
Index
Biography
Mikkel Høghøj is a cultural historian specialized in modern and contemporary Nordic urban, planning, and welfare history. His research deals widely with the urban and environmental history of the Danish welfare society. He is a researcher and curator in the Danish Museum of Science and Technology and holds a PhD in urban history from Aarhus University.
Mette My Madsen is a postdoctoral researcher and PI at the Research Centre for Social Urban Modelling at the National Museum of Denmark specialized in the cross‑field between urban planning and social coherence in the region of Denmark/North. Her research includes formal and informal social organization, welfare‑governing, insurgent infrastructure and circular economy. She holds a PhD in anthropology from the University of Copenhagen.
Anne Corlin is Assistant Professor at the Aarhus School of Architecture, where she teaches Urban design in the master's programme Desirable Densities. Her research revolves around socially sustainable urban design and how to design neighbourhoods for community building, focusing on both the design processes and the spatial and physical design.
Morten Nielsen is a social anthropologist working on socially sustainable urban development. Since November 2018, he has been based at the National Museum of Denmark as Research Professor and Head of the Research Center for Social Urban Modelling (SUMO).






