{"title":"The Sleepout","authors":"Nanette Carter","doi":"10.55939/a3999pm4i5","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Going to bed each night in a sleepout—a converted verandah, balcony or small free-standing structure was, for most of the 20th century, an everyday Australian experience, since homes across the nation whether urban, suburban, or rural, commonly included a space of this kind.\n\n The sleepout was a liminal space that was rarely a formal part of a home’s interior, although it was often used as a semi-permanent sleeping quarter. Initially a response to the discomfort experienced during hot weather in 19th century bedrooms and encouraged by the early 20th century enthusiasm for the perceived benefits of sleeping in fresh air, the sleepout became a convenient cover for the inadequate supply of housing in Australian cities and towns and provided a face-saving measure for struggling rural families. Acceptance of this solution to over-crowding was so deep and so widespread that the Commonwealth Government built freestanding sleepouts in the gardens of suburban homes across Australia during the crisis of World War II to house essential war workers. Rather than disappearing at the war’s end, these were sold to homeowners and occupied throughout the acute post-war housing shortage of the 1940s and 1950s, then used into the 1970s as a space for children to play and teenagers to gain some privacy.\n\n This paper explores this common feature of Australian 20th century homes, a regional tradition which has not, until recently, been the subject of academic study. Exploring the attitudes, values and policies that led to the sleepout’s introduction, proliferation and disappearance, it explains that despite its ubiquity in the first three-quarters of the 20th century, the sleepout slipped from Australia’s national consciousness during a relatively brief period of housing surplus beginning in the 1970s. As the supply of affordable housing has declined in the 21st century, the free-standing sleepout or studio has re-emerged, housing teenagers of low-income families.\n","PeriodicalId":445270,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand.","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand.","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.55939/a3999pm4i5","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Going to bed each night in a sleepout—a converted verandah, balcony or small free-standing structure was, for most of the 20th century, an everyday Australian experience, since homes across the nation whether urban, suburban, or rural, commonly included a space of this kind. The sleepout was a liminal space that was rarely a formal part of a home’s interior, although it was often used as a semi-permanent sleeping quarter. Initially a response to the discomfort experienced during hot weather in 19th century bedrooms and encouraged by the early 20th century enthusiasm for the perceived benefits of sleeping in fresh air, the sleepout became a convenient cover for the inadequate supply of housing in Australian cities and towns and provided a face-saving measure for struggling rural families. Acceptance of this solution to over-crowding was so deep and so widespread that the Commonwealth Government built freestanding sleepouts in the gardens of suburban homes across Australia during the crisis of World War II to house essential war workers. Rather than disappearing at the war’s end, these were sold to homeowners and occupied throughout the acute post-war housing shortage of the 1940s and 1950s, then used into the 1970s as a space for children to play and teenagers to gain some privacy. This paper explores this common feature of Australian 20th century homes, a regional tradition which has not, until recently, been the subject of academic study. Exploring the attitudes, values and policies that led to the sleepout’s introduction, proliferation and disappearance, it explains that despite its ubiquity in the first three-quarters of the 20th century, the sleepout slipped from Australia’s national consciousness during a relatively brief period of housing surplus beginning in the 1970s. As the supply of affordable housing has declined in the 21st century, the free-standing sleepout or studio has re-emerged, housing teenagers of low-income families.
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的Sleepout
在20世纪的大部分时间里,每天晚上在一个经过改造的阳台、阳台或小型独立结构的露宿处睡觉是澳大利亚人的日常体验,因为全国各地的家庭,无论是城市、郊区还是农村,通常都有这样的空间。睡觉的地方是一个有限的空间,很少是家庭内部的正式组成部分,尽管它经常被用作半永久性的睡眠区。最初是为了应对19世纪炎热天气下卧室里的不适,并受到20世纪初人们对在新鲜空气中睡觉的好处的热情的鼓励,露宿成为澳大利亚城镇住房供应不足的一种方便的掩饰,并为挣扎中的农村家庭提供了一种挽回面子的措施。这种解决过度拥挤问题的方法得到了广泛而深入的接受,以至于在第二次世界大战危机期间,联邦政府在澳大利亚各地郊区住宅的花园里建造了独立的露宿点,以容纳重要的战争工作者。这些房子并没有在战争结束时消失,而是被卖给了房主,在20世纪40年代和50年代战后严重的住房短缺期间一直被占用,然后在20世纪70年代被用作儿童玩耍和青少年获得隐私的空间。本文探讨了澳大利亚20世纪住宅的这一共同特征,这一区域性传统直到最近才成为学术研究的主题。探究了导致露宿的引入、扩散和消失的态度、价值观和政策,它解释说,尽管露宿在20世纪前四分之三的时间里无处不在,但在20世纪70年代开始的一段相对短暂的住房过剩时期,露宿从澳大利亚的国民意识中消失了。随着21世纪经济适用房的供应减少,独立的露宿或工作室重新出现,为低收入家庭的青少年提供住房。
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