26
BERLIN,
room, which had no separate entrance, was let to two lodgers In another
dwelling of the same size both living room and kitchen contained two beds.
The closet arrangements in houses of this class are often of a very primitive
kind ; they are seldom found within the dwelling, and sometimes they take the
form of a cupboard-like structure erected on the landing.
It is not intended to represent the conditions here described as typical of
Berlin as a whole, yet they are nevertheless very common in all the older quarters
of the city, and no picture of Berlin working-class homes would be true which
ignored these darker features.
Mention has already been made of the interdependence of Berlin and its
suburbs in the matters of work and housing accommodation, and more particular
reference to several of the adjacent towns seems called for. Charlottenburg, on
whose outskirts are found many large engineering and electrical works, is in all
respects a replica of Berlin, of which it is a westerly prolongation. Instead
of adopting an architectural style of its own, as was possible thirty years ago,
when its population was only 25,000, or one-tenth of the present figure,
Charlotten burg has slavishly followed the lead of its big neighbour, and the
“ barrack ” house and the courtyard are in full possession. The result here, as
in Berlin, is an increasing density of population, more stories per building, more
dwellings per story. While in December, 1900, there were 12‘3 households
per building, the number was 13'2 in 1905, and the average number of persons
per building was 52-50 in 1900 and 56 03 in 1905, the highest local figures
being 118-14, 95*88, 98, and 83*52. On the other hand, there is a greater diffu
sion of the population at Charlottenburg, and few districts are exclusively
inhabited by working-class tenants ; these are found chiefly in the side streets
and the back houses around the courtyards. The streets are wide, asphalt is
general save in the older parts, where setts remain, and a good deal of planting
has been done. Though the builder has done his best to sweep away all traces
of former architecture, many old houses of one or two stories, with high gables,
red roofs, and wooden shutters, still stand in busy streets. As Charlottenburg
is so modern the general conditions of housing are very favourable ; the only
serious defect is the limited accommodation with which working-class house
holds have to be content. At the census of December, 1905, the 56,269
households of the town were lodged in dwellings of the following character and
size (heatable and unbeatable rooms being classified indiscriminately) :—
Dwellings consisting of
Number of Dwellings. Percentage of the whole.
One room
Two rooms
Three rooms
Kitchen only ...
One room without kitchen ...
\ One room with kitchen
1 Two rooms without kitchen
l Two rooms with kitchen ...
I Three rooms without kitchen
Larger accommodation...
Total
119 11 351
1,202 [ A ’ d0A
12 !o![12.M1
17 ’ 4 ^ 117,501
24,876
56,269
2-4
22-3
311
442
100-0
In districts where the working classes live in large numbers the proportion
of small dwellings is far greater. The usual size of a working man’s dwelling
in Charlottenburg is one or two rooms with a kitchen ; dwellings of three living
and bed rooms are very rare, and even with two rooms the tenant is often coní-
pelled to take lodgers. The fiats do not differ in structure from those of
modern Berlin houses ; corridors are general and not infrequently there are two
dwellings upon one corridor. Charlottenburg has also imitated Berlin to the
extent of introducing the basement as a recognised part of the housing system.
It is no longer approved save under important restrictions which limTt its old
subterranean character, yet there were still 665 basement dwellings of all kinds
at the census of December, 1905, 203 being in the Castle district 1X9 i n the
Inner Town, and 60 in the East district. ’
Hitherto Charlottenburg has not suffered from lack of buildino- enterprise
ánd the municipality has not felt called upon to undertake housing reform’
A committee of the Town Council does indeed exist for the purpose of