‘To make a garden of the town’: The Nineteenth-Century Legacy of the Hampstead Garden Suburb
‘To make a garden of the town’: The Nineteenth-Century Legacy of the Hampstead Garden Suburb
This chapter explores the architectural and social origins of the Hampstead Garden Suburb. Initiated by Henrietta Barnett, Hampstead Garden Suburb was radical departure from nineteenth-century town planning in its emphasis on a variety of housing types, integrated green spaces, and various community and social services. Yet its design was not only a clear response to the social problems presented by the nineteenth-century city, but also a synthesis of several models of new domestic architecture that existed in the city itself including model dwellings, women’s residences, and settlement housing. This chapter engages with both visual and literary representations of the Hampstead Garden Suburb to establish its nineteenth-century legacy.
Keywords: Garden Suburb Verses, Hampstead Garden Suburb, Nineteenth-Century Town Planning, Model Dwellings, Women’s Residences, Settlement Housing, Henrietta Barnett
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