Many companies have built housing and even company towns for their employees, especially if the mine or the factory is far away from cities. In the U.S., Pullman, Kohler, and Hershey did it. There is even Steinway Village in the borough of Queens in New York City, built for the piano maker’s employees, which had housing, schools, and an amusement park. The housing was often well planned and designed by the top planners and architects, in tune with the latest ideas.
They are still building workers’ housing in many parts of the world, and it is still often innovative. This housing in Kodla, Karnataka, India, designed by Sanjay Puri Architects, is composed of studio apartments, a hostel, and a guest house to house workers of a new integrated cement mill and clinker line for a Shree Cement Ltd. plant.
The company gives many of the same reasons for doing this as the Kohlers and the Hershey’s did: “For the last forty years, we have calibrated our mission to address the social needs of neighbouring communities of all our plant locations.” The website states it runs computer literacy programs and supports health and family welfare, women empowerment, and local infrastructure development.
According to the press release: “Due to the hot climate of the region, where temperatures exceed 35°C for 8 months of the year, each of the rooms is angularly stepped in the layout and oriented towards the north.”
The orientation of housing in India is actually important because of “Vastu Shastra,” which translates literally to “the science of architecture.” Years ago, I was designing a modular house for an Indian couple in Ontario, Canada, where the sun is to the south. On this lot, the best views were to the south, but they insisted that the house had to face north to be Vastu-compliant. In this project, most of the boxes, balconies, and views are on the northeast side of the building.
The plans are interesting, with the studio and guest house buildings having six bedrooms and six ensuite bathrooms for each. And everyone gets a balcony; it seems almost lavish by North American hostel or student residence standards.
This Treehugger is not usually a fan of concrete construction, but that is what much of India is built of, and Shree Cement Ltd. claims to be “committed to finding sustainable ways of making cement, which includes usage of alternate fuel resources, renewable sources of energy, conservation of the mined areas and upliftment of community.”
Sanjay Puri Architects is trying to minimize its impact:
You can see by the shadows on the building that all of the projecting boxes keep the sun off almost every window, reducing solar gain.
In North America today, housing has become unaffordable in many cities where the jobs are, and companies aren’t building company housing anymore. The concept is not without its problems— having your home owned by the company you work for didn’t work out for Pullman employees and even the sweetest little company town, Hershey, Pennsylvania, had its issues. Now Elon Musk wants to build the new city of Starbase in Texas, but he could be a difficult landlord.
But at least his city would have good Wifi. Perhaps company housing is an idea whose time has come around again.