Voices of Residents – An Analytical Method; Henri Raymond 1966
Paper in proceeding, 2014

As a current observation this contribution intends to situate origins of the notion of the primacy of residential quality in urban creation in a historical context before May ‘68 and to show the relevance and actuality of this concept in emerging contemporary projective urban architectural practices. This is done through a retrospective re-reading of a major research contribution of architectural residential sociology elaborated by Henri Raymond and his team of ISU directed by Henri Lefebvre. A summary of results were published in 1966 as l’Habitat pavillonnaire and re-published in 2001 with the three different components together with the never published applied methodological instruction for inquiries of non-directed deep interviews with residents in modest single family housing suburban zones. This ground breaking qualitative interpretive approach in social sciences with repercussions in residential architectural design orientations is regarded by the author as a still valid example of how social sciences can provide a more profound understanding of residents’ perceptions of their spatio-social residential situation, than what the standard survey can offer for design guidance.

architectural sociology

detached single family houses

suburban zones

non-directed interviews

urban residential studies

biographical qualitative research

sociological methods of interpretative enquiries

Author

Sten Gromark

Chalmers, Architecture

NSBB Conference; Tallinn University of Technology (TUT), October 8-10, 2014

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Subject Categories

Other Humanities

HUMANITIES

Sociology

Philosophy, Ethics and Religion

History

More information

Created

10/8/2017