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From London to Barcelona, cooperative housing projects build community and help address the housing crisis.

What cohousing really looks like in 4 European cities

[Source Image: Imane/iStock/Getty Images Plus]

BY Aimee RawlinsJohannes Novyand The Conversation6 minute read

The debate around how to fix the global housing crisis usually hinges on whether more market or more state is required. Some people stress the need for additional housing stock and less regulatory red tape so that the market can create it. Others claim that stricter government measures—against ruthless developers and landlords, more rent control, and more public housing—are crucial.

Increasingly, policymakers are paying attention to what lies between the public and private sectors. The United Nations’ New Urban Agenda—a key international policy framework to promote sustainable urban development—highlights the benefits of “cooperative solutions, such as cohousing, community land trusts, and other forms of collective tenure.” A slew of recent community-led housing projects across Europe and beyond show how this can work.

Cohousing includes all kinds of edifices, new and existing. It is not tied to a particular type of tenure. And the groups of people it involves can vary considerably in size. At its heart are two key principles. Residents do not only live next to each other, but with each other, in buildings that comprise communal spaces and facilities. And they take the lead, or at least are involved in, the design and management of their communities.

Communal life

German sociologist Anja Szypulski has lauded the “abundant potential” cohousing proffers for sustainable housing and neighborhood development. The first way it does this is by promoting an ethos of participation and sharing.

Residents are involved throughout the building process. When, in the wake of the 2008 financial crash, a developer pulled out of a state-owned site in Cambridge, the city council opted for a cohousing initiative to build on the land instead, precisely because of the social and community benefits that would bring.

The resulting Marmalade Lane project opened in 2018 after four years, during which the cohousing members developed the architectural brief, sought planning permission and contracted builders.

Residents also often take part in actually building their homes, too. The Church Grove project in Lewisham, South London, is a community-led housing development on an old derelict school and industrial site. When completed, it will count 36 homes designed to be permanently affordable. To keep the costs low, future residents are involved in this construction process. They have already built a communal hall on the site.

Communality also shapes daily life in a cohousing project. Marmalade Lane residents share 42 homes—both houses and flats—organized around a common house with a shared kitchen, refectory, and fireplace, a pedestrianized lane, outdoor play area and garden, a laundry, a gym, and a workshop.

Similarly, La Borda, in Barcelona, is a cooperative housing block comprising 28 apartments, organized around a communal, open-plan atrium. Residents share a kitchen-dining area, a laundry room, guest rooms, and generous outdoor spaces. Their flats were deliberately designed small, with movable walls, so that a room belonging to one flat could become part of another, as the need arose.

The facade of the La Borda cohousing development in Barcelona [Photo: Velkej Led/Wiki Commons]

Socially and architecturally sustainable

The La Borda project contributes to the wider community, too, by organizing events and sourcing goods from local cooperatives. It is based on a participatory planning process, and costs have been kept low through the use of smart low-tech solutions and a lot of self-help during construction by its future users, who are also responsible for the maintenance and management of the project. Decisions are made collectively in a general assembly, and all adults participate in various committees that deal with different issues, from financial matters to communal dinners.

While the idea of committee meetings and doors facing each other won’t appeal to everyone, the benefits of knowing you’re not alone are clear. Residents at Marmalade Lane have spoken about children playing together, stay-at-home mothers not feeling isolated, and retirees being engaged and occupied.

The UK Cohousing Network describes cohousing as a “way of resolving the isolation many people experience today, recreating the neighborly support of the past.” And research bears this out. A recent study on the way cohousing dwellers in the U.K. coped with lockdown found that many residents experienced a level of mutual support and care that went well beyond the general good neighborliness of the early days of the pandemic.

Cohousing projects also encourage sustainability by typically being built for the long term. The Marmalade Lane buildings used environmentally friendly materials and designs that promote low-energy use for a small-carbon footprint.

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Critics have lauded La Borda, meanwhile, for its bold innovation—the passive cooling and heating system; the fact that it does not include a car park, and thus has a significantly lower projected carbon footprint; and the way the architect-residents continue to improve the building as needs emerge. The project has been awarded the 2022 Mies Van Der Rohe prize for emerging architecture, with the jury noting its radical, “transgressive” approach to shared resources and capacities. It was deemed to be effecting “political and urban change from within the system.”

Institutional support

An EU-funded report on the right to housing highlights that cohousing has been “coopted by the market.” And it is true that cohousing nowadays can be less an alternative to market housing than an upmarket niche product of it, with prices of entry often prohibitively high.

Grassroots initiatives can find it difficult to get hold of suitable sites and to finance their projects, especially when their budgets are limited. In many countries, housing, tax, and lending policies create a huge bias in favor of traditional homeownership, while planning systems favor large developers.

For cohousing to thrive, then, institutional support is key, from facilitating access to public land to providing grants as well as planning support and technical advice. It also helps for projects and initiatives to team up and support each other, as an initiative in Germany shows.

Founded in Freiburg, Germany, in 1992, the Miethäusersyndikat, or apartment-house syndicate, helps self-organized housing initiatives get off the ground, at scale. It is essentially a consortium of existing housing projects that acts as a nonprofit, cooperatively run investment company, helping people to buy or build homes for cooperative use.

These projects are organized as limited liability companies, with both the syndicate and the respective residents as joint owners and the individual residents paying rent to the liability company they co-own. Residents also largely manage their properties themselves.

While residents are free to decide on most matters, including designs, the modalities of living together, or rent levels, they are not able to convert their houses into traditional private property or to sell them. The syndicate’s approach is, at its core, about permanently removing housing from the market.

Similarly central to it is the idea of solidarity. Projects with more financial resources support those with less. All residents contribute to a syndicate-wide solidarity fund, that gradually increases over time as other burdens, such as loans, decrease. This in turn makes it possible to support new projects, of which it currently has at least 177 in the works, in Germany and elsewhere.

These 177 projects are not only enabling thousands of people to escape the vagaries of the housing market. In many cases they also demonstrate the innovative potential that comes with empowering people to take control of the creation of their homes and communities.

Johannes Novy is a senior lecturer in urban planning at the School of Architecture and Cities, University of Westminster.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aimee Rawlins is a senior editor at Fast Company, overseeing the Impact section. You can connect with her on X/Twitter at @aimeerawlins and on LinkedIn. More


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