This thesis The Smithsons at Robin Hood can be seen as a logical
continuation of This Was Tomorrow, in that it deals specifically
with that tomorrow: the culmination of the Smithsons' thinking, on the
problem of mass working-class housing, in the built form of Robin Hood
Gardens, Poplar, London E.14., completed in 1972.
It is the purpose of this thesis to argue that the Smithsons' intentions
were indeed a dream, and that Robin Hood is an ideological fragment
of that dream. The building is, as Johnson suggests: 'very far
from being just another block of council flats', equally it is not
the 'demonstration of a more enjoyable way of living' that the
Smithsons intended: the blend of common-sense and poetry - ordinariness
and light- ultimately fails.
This particular ideology, specific to the Smithsons, was dreamed of
in the 'fifties: Robin Hood was conceived, in that self-same spirit, in
the 'sixties, and completed in 1972. Now, in the 'eighties, we must
make a critical analysis of that ideology.
This will be undertaken by a critical comparison of the Smithsons'
stated criteria, with the observed realities of the way of life
experienced by those that have been chosen to live in Robin Hood.
Date of Award | 1982 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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THE SMITHSONS AT ROBIN HOOD
Furse, J. (Author). 1982
Student thesis: PhD