Urbani izziv Volume 20, No. 2, December 2009
                : 74–82
             
                 (Articles)
                 UDK: 711.582:351.778.532; 316.334.54:316.422
             
 
             
             
              
             Author
                Pascal  DE DECKER
                     Hogeschool Gent and Sint-Lucas School of Architecture, Brussels and Ghent, Belgium 
                     pascal.de.decker@skynet.be
                Caroline NEWTON
                     Hogeschool Gent and Sint-Lucas School of Architecture, Brussels and Ghent, Belgium 
                     caroline.newton@mac.com
              
             Title
             At the fall of Utopia
              
                 Abstract
                 Immediately after WW2 numerous large-scale housing estates began to spring up. More often than not they consisted of high-rises. Merely 50 years later a great number of these developments are in the process of demolition or are seriously undergoing restructuring. The Modernistic thoughts, inspired by the CIAM (Congrès International d’Architecture Moderne) movement and Le Corbusier seem to have lost the appeal they once held. In this contribution we look into this evolution and more specifically, we focus on the misinterpretation of the importance of the (symbolic) meaning of housing by the Modernist movement. A misjudgement, that eventually resulted in the speedy dismantling of these estates.
                  
                 Key Words
                 meaning of housing, social housing estates, modernism, decay