TY - JOUR
T1 - Negotiating the Modern Cross-Class “Model Home”
T2 - Domestic Experiences in Basil Spence’s Claremont Court
AU - Costa Santos, Sandra
AU - Bertolino, Nadia
PY - 2020/11/1
Y1 - 2020/11/1
N2 - This article investigates the spatial articulation of architecture and home through the exploration of current domestic experiences in Basil Spence’s Claremont Court housing scheme (1959-1962), Edinburgh. How architecture and home are both idealized and lived is the backdrop for a discussion that draws on the concept of “model home,” or physical representation of a domestic ideal. The article reads Claremont Court as an architectural prototype of the modern domestic ideal, before exploring its reception by five of its households through the use of visual methods and semistructured interviews. Receiving the model home involves negotiating between ideal and lived homes. Building on this idea, the article contributes with a focus on the spatiality of such reception, showing how it is modulated according to the architectural affordances that the “model home” represents. The article expands on scholarship on architecture and home with empirical evidence that argues the reciprocal spatiality of home.
AB - This article investigates the spatial articulation of architecture and home through the exploration of current domestic experiences in Basil Spence’s Claremont Court housing scheme (1959-1962), Edinburgh. How architecture and home are both idealized and lived is the backdrop for a discussion that draws on the concept of “model home,” or physical representation of a domestic ideal. The article reads Claremont Court as an architectural prototype of the modern domestic ideal, before exploring its reception by five of its households through the use of visual methods and semistructured interviews. Receiving the model home involves negotiating between ideal and lived homes. Building on this idea, the article contributes with a focus on the spatiality of such reception, showing how it is modulated according to the architectural affordances that the “model home” represents. The article expands on scholarship on architecture and home with empirical evidence that argues the reciprocal spatiality of home.
KW - domestic experiences
KW - architectural affordances
KW - architecture and home
KW - cross-class domestic ideal
KW - modern model home
U2 - 10.1177/1206331218777426
DO - 10.1177/1206331218777426
M3 - Article
VL - 23
SP - 492
EP - 507
JO - Space and Culture
JF - Space and Culture
SN - 1206-3312
IS - 4
ER -