Fostering long-term conviviality for refugees in the city

Inclusive, collaborative housing in Vienna

Caroline Birkner

Published in Issue 6.2 // The Long Read

Keywords: European housing crisis, collaborative housing, affordable housing, conviviality, inclusive communities, refugee housing

Abstract:

Vienna faces a ‘twofold housing and refugee crisis’ amid ongoing migration to Europe. As housing options become increasingly limited, refugees, migrants, and asylum seekers often struggle to find adequate housing, spending a disproportionate share of their income on substandard options. This research highlights progressive trends in Vienna’s refugee housing sector, particularly following the 2009 introduction of ‘Social Sustainability’ in building competitions by the City Council. This initiative has fostered several collaborative housing communities that support inclusive living. By analyzing four of these projects, the study identifies key factors that facilitate newcomers’ social and spatial integration. Ultimately, the paper aims to advocate for newcomers’ right to quality housing, emphasizing the everyday and long-term challenges faced by inclusive communities striving for conviviality in a state of thrown togetherness.

doi.org/10.54825/YRYV6014

Caroline Birkner holds an MPhil in Architecture from the University of Cambridge and an M.Sc. in Humanitarian Architecture from UIC Barcelona. She now starts her PhD at TU Munich investigating inclusive communities in European cities. Caroline is particularly interested in the role of high-quality architecture to enable community building.

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