Housing options in India: Part 2, consciously created affordable housing
By: David A. Smith
[Continued from yesterday's Part 1.]
Does Does it matter where they live if they all go to the same school?
In yesterday’s post laying out a typology of where urban Indians live – a companion to my previous two-part snapshot of India’s housing situation – we started from the bottom up, looking initially at the purely private, purely informal solutions that people create out of necessity. The photos demonstrate that given enough incumbency, people acquire an implied political legitimacy, and the municipality takes small steps to rationalizing the public-space aspects of the urban infrastructure.
[Unless otherwise noted, all photos in this multi-part post were taken by David Smith on visits to
4. Slum-relocation community
As slums are a place where private investment outpaces public infrastructure, with continuous urbanization there usually comes a moment when the informal settlements have overrun the available transportation or utility infrastructure, and a portion of the slum must be demolished to create space, such as for a railroad right-of-way.

Alleyway through a slum: that’s a train going by

Commuter train, Mumbai – the municipality required ten meters right-of-way either side of the tracks
Under Indian law applicable to Mumbai, the slumdwellers had a right of access to housing, meaning that to relocate them required their consent, and to obtain it, the government promised to build them new affordable high-rise co-operative flats (which we’ll see later in this post). But that would take time, and in the meantime, the right-of-way had to be cleared, so the municipality built relocation flats – transitional housing:

Relocation flats, Mumbai
Naturally, people living in transitional housing have little motivation to beautify their public space:

Relocation flats, Mumbai, the trash does tend to pile up
Yet they keep clean their interior space:

Flats arranged around a courtyard, and it is fairly clean
When in their relocation settlement, they conduct business.

Pipe scavenging and recycling business
5. Affordable co-op
Because housing – its location, quality, production, and affordability – will be a driver of Indian global urban competitiveness, at some point a government – usually a municipal government – decides as a kind of civic economic self-defense that it must create affordable housing.
Mankhurd co-operatives, funded through World Bank Loan repaid by railway surtax (see below)
As cities densify, there is only one direction to go – up.

Oshiwira 1, affordable co-operative built by SPARC, Mumbai
The city becomes vertical, and to become vertical, that requires structural framing, which implies formality.

The scaffolding may be casual but the building is reinforced concrete
Similarly, cities mean traffic jams, and bad cities have worse traffic jams, so the municipal competitiveness – to say nothing of quality of life – requires the addition of public transportation, and depending on location, that often means railways.
In Mumbai, for instance, people relocated away from municipal infrastructure (previous grouping) benefitted from affordable new-construction high-rise co-operatives whose principal loans were repaid through a surtax on railway tickets – thus drawing a direct financial link between the improvement of middle-class infrastructure (in this case, the railroad right-of-way) and increased affordability for the poor.
Once the government is involved, formality also implies certain basic amenities. Even though the flats are tiny, they have all the necessities, such as a flush toilet:

Toilet, which will be two footprints in the floor
The toilet lacks fixtures – for the time being, it is merely a ceramic hole into which people make their deposits – but the configuration allows for a later retrofit of an individual seat toilet. The apartments are extremely small, averaging 25 square meters (about 270 square feet), which compels design-size limitations such as showers rather than tubs:

Bathroom: designed for just a handheld shower
Concrete, though strong, is brittle, and extremely difficult to retrofit. (Ever try drilling into concrete?)

Wiring running outside the structural concrete, Oshiwira 1
[We see a similar phenomenon in pre-WW1 English homes and apartments, where the plumbing and electrical run outside the structure because there is no room inside the building – and its narrow walls – to accommodate hiding the piping.]
Because increasing lower-income Indian affluence changes people’s housing consumption expectations, the embryo apartment that is an acceptable size today may be functionally obsolescent in a decade, and if so the retrofitting will be a challenge. Even though I am delighted to see these high-rise flats going up, I worry just a little about their eventual economic or physical obsolescence.
6. Affordable high-rise market flat
With such an enormous shortage of housing – of all configurations, particularly the affordable ones – it’s no wonder that major Indian conglomerates are rapidly entering the field of new housing production, such as with the Tata nano-house. Sometimes it seems as if the entire nation is one gigantic construction site:

Affordable high-rise in construction, Ahmedabad, January 2010

Built, building, and planned to be built: Ahmedabad
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Affordable new-construction high-rise flats, south Ahmedabad

Affordable new-construction high-rise flats, south Ahmedabad
Remarkably, much of the construction is being done by women:

Women are a large portion of the construction workforce
The goal is a fully formal, mortgageable house in the price range of Rs 150,000 to Rs 300,000 [Roughly $3,500 to $7,500 US – Ed.], an income band for which there is already a huge demand, one showing no signs of abating.
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Recently built affordable market flats, Ahmedabad
The developments are well designed and highly dense:

Site plan and floor plate, Ahmedabad affordable high-rise
Though small, the apartments are fully formal:

On the inside, it’s fully formal
They have a modest but serviceable toilet:

Two footprints today, a ceramic bowl tomorrow?
In addition to the utilities – water, electrical, and heat if required (often it is not) – there is a fully practical if tiny kitchen:

Everything including the kitchen sink
Indeed, so rapidly is
[Concluded tomorrow in Part 3.]

















































