By Gérald Ledent & Alessandro Porotto
Modern urban terraced houses or row houses emerged in Europe from the 17th century onwards. Usually two to three storeys high and with a garden at the back, they formed the traditional urban block. In Brussels, this bourgeois form of housing took on a particularly varied and inspiring form – including the well-known Art Nouveau residences – and forms the DNA of the city to this day. Brussels Housing: Atlas of Residential Building Types analyses 100 selected examples illustrating the emergence of the terraced house and its further development in other forms of housing. The result is a broad panorama and a history of the architecture and development of the city of Brussels with its particularly heterogenous cityscape. With a photo essay by the well-known Belgian photographer Maxime Delvaux.
Basel, 2023, 33 x 24 cm, 352pp, illustrated, Hardback.