ان ایر อ SS GOVERNMENT HOUSING SCHEME Sargen M 447 11 WELL HALL ¥ N WEL L Seconda kam Med W WR ELL HALL is only one of the British Government's housing operations. It is situated about a mile from Woolwich and is a complete new development. It consists en- tirely of permanent dwellings for workmen. There are four types of houses of from two to four rooms with bath, the rentals ranging from seven shillings to fifteen shillings and sixpence a week. There have been built some sixteen hun- dred houses, all of the best materials available, and the design has preserved the traditions of English rural life. Mr. Ewart G. Culpin, Secre- tary of the International Garden Cities and N I M ICK Rik HAL < DEC 4 1917 23 L મ WW SANDB R ||||| ELTHAM 4 KENT «TT о Frank exauces. HM-OFFICE OF WORKS WESTMINSTER Town Planning Association, whose article in the April Journal dealt with the application of town-planning principles to the new housing developments of England, writes that he believes Well Hall to be "easily the first thing in cottage plans and elevations for the whole world." This statement is perhaps capable of a wrong interpretation, for it is evident that the plans would not suit living conditions in the United States; but, from the point of view of a great housing undertaking deliberately under- taken by a Government and guided by experts to yield the maximum advantages consistent t THE JOURNAL OF ここ •tin [] All N · 8 • Ag OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTS 16 WOOLWICH A Y HIS WAS HE IS 46 18000 199-14 efforts was + to reset for one to there too, threeRTOS INGENTING. PENALTIME THAT REFRESCAPER. MUST-WAR AND SENTENGEWING + MASA MENANG. WAS THEATER SENIORS BREE +4 Kiwillo PE R E …………………………………………………… A བདག་ས་ག་ནས་མི་གཞས་བྱས་པ་མ་རྣམས་། ་་འཐབམ་ང་བད་པར་བག་ལས་པ་མཛད་་ ཆ་གཅུག་ ནག་འགུ་ ང་"ཡགས་ལ་ R O M ***** N U QZ D ught Spy Shin J D པར་མ་གས་གས་་གསན་པར་བགགར་ འགྱུར་གང་ མག་་LouTབར་བུག་ན་ཚ་འགུས་བ་ལའང་ལུ་ལོག་ན་ཡང་ཁ་ཁ་ 3 3 2 with a given mode of life, Well Hall is un- doubtedly entitled to rank where Mr. Culpin places it. Of primary importance in the consideration. of the underlying reasons which led to the build- ing of Well Hall is the fact that in spite of urgent necessity it was decided to make it a permanent enterprise rather than a merely temporary one. This has been the consistent policy of the British Government, except where * →→ Ang Paglie Mino - ****** **Wat te doen. S е 2 MA AR མ་ ་ས་ ་ ་ ་ ་ ་ G O L ****** CAS - at v 295. Petite & a **-**- -ðar eð 1 – tam •* *** R A when we ooo 1. th. ... - A and for the door tops, so fear. One with the WHERE WERE". THE THIN D ******་་་་ TIN BOWEJ N ROAD R N O E C B A 招 Wym D R R E W S E EN MATO L L A R 7D ONTE Cam H L urgence made it impossible to wait upon. permanent construction, for the difference in cost between permanent and temporary work is measured by a small margin, and it was decided that it would be folly to throw away money upon makeshift expedients. Possibly this decis- ion was also influenced by the knowledge that nothing is harder to be rid of than a temporary building. We believe that the shacks built at the time of the flood emergency in Galveston. Mikt A USAKAR By L L FF * SEA A = 4TH Bur k O 서 well i wont then wagon is on some and for the west one-siment » x? p 4 D R ܘ ܘ A E RE N VEGANISAS PAPER, MAAR NIE D M 和花粉 M REA 300 A HANGF sal ⠀⠀⠀ R R P A A L ERT 秘古 CHT SAT THEATRI S R R ******* E ThemeshBD O Y R QX% WOWING O M E A T O D WELL HALL Ro U ********* CLASS I Re $44$$P**! CLASS 8-S CLASS 3 CLASS 4 A mothers Tên tôi là một máy giặt tại Đà là nh MY THE FACAD **** whererat penting protest protest in the aggre **** R se, pa sa v ka T о are still doing duty as slums, and such is the and such is the usual experience with temporary buildings. In cases where the British Government could not spare the time necessary to build permanently, huts of a temporary or semi-temporary charac- ter were constructed, either of concrete slabs or wooden framing. These were three in type and, as built at East Riggs, another important housing development, will be illustrated and described GROUND FLOOR ·UVING ROOM · PARLOUR · BEDROOM - SCULLERY · ETC. FIRST FLOOR · 3 BED ROOMS · BATH · VAC GROUND FLOOR FIRST FLOOR GROUND FLOOR · LIVING ROOM · PARLOUR · SOULLERY- ETC. FIRST FLOOR · 3 BED ROOMS · BATH · VCʻ • 3 To GROUND FLOOR · LIVING ROOM SCULLERY WITH BATH · ETC. FIRST FLOOR ·3 BED ROOMS. WC · WELL HALL FLATS STATION UVING ROOM GOVERNMENT HOUSING SCHEME »WELL HALL+ELTHAM & KENTE + ΚΕΝΤ SCULLERY WITH BATH ECT 2 BED ROOMS Frais HAT OFFICE OF WORKS WESTMINSTER in the October Journal, which will also contain a list of references on Industrial Housing. In addition to these purely housing opera- tions, the Government has erected stores, halls, and other public buildings necessary for a good- sized town; in one case there were provided bakeries, a central kitchen, laundry, schools, churches, and all the usual accessories of com- munity life. Â G T 1. 15일 LIVING ROOM 11 P=2 PARLOUR P LIVING ROOM SD tru js PARLOUR .. 1 دو. MALL HOLL BEDROOM COAL RID SCULLERY 25.71 centre of barly oral 150 WRO LIVING ROOM SCULLERY CON BEDROO IT 8.4 6 fois van e COAL COALY FOOD SCULLERY HALL 1:10 The MIL A PARLOUR SCULLSEYE 9: PARLOUR -53 ROO STORE ୫ STORE THE COVERED WAY. 20.7- 9.1 'MALL PARLOUR X PARLOUR HALL LATINS LIVING ROOM „ÉRIA / LIVING ROOM COAL ni - 25.72/ salweer COAL + 4 Ve .49 Ground Floor Plan. A PARLOUR UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PÅRLOUR 13:00{ TYOD 96 Me 3 9015 03854 3297 IMA GOVERNMENT HOUSING SCHEme, WELL HALL, WOOLWICH. 1915. Group facing WELL HALL and CONGREVE ROADS, 1st and 2nd Class. tega mat SẬP HALL 16.4 HALL RDD SCULLERT - LIVING BRON 11 9 LIVING-ROOM 163. FACING: BROAD· 8 30 78 AZET #SOULLE PARLOUR SCULLERY COAL HALL LIVING ROOM= LIVING ROOM HALL ++ PARLOUR 196 FOOD FOOD -A H. M. Office of Works, Westminster, London, S. W. ! I