{"title":"The company premises as passport","authors":"Jelle Angillis","doi":"10.48003/knob.122.2023.3.791","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In several academic disciplines that focus on (historical) building practice there is growing interest in building contractors and their employees. Their contribution and influence are increasingly the subject of research. After the Second World War the contractor’s field of work was defined by productivity, specialization and industrialization, which profoundly altered the professional character of this branch of industry. Social developments and the prevailing idea of an all-encompassing welfare state triggered top-down and bottom-up changes in this traditionally highly cyclical sector. This fostered diversity in the contracting world, yet those diverse profiles and identities often remain unrecognized today. This is compounded by the fact that, unlike architects for example, the source material left behind by contractors and their employees is usually less informative and often fragmented.
 This article seeks to demonstrate the potential of alternative source material by analysing company photos in order to better understand the profile and identity of two post-war Belgian contractors. During their existence, Van Coillie of Oostende (1919-1976) and Van Laere of Kruibeke (1938-1989) amassed extensive collections of photographs, which were recently made accessible by the Flanders Architecture Institute (VAi). The focus of this article is on a series of photos from the 1960s and ’70s depicting the headquarters of both companies. These company premises and buildings were the very heart of the businesses, which adopted a pragmatic or strategic design to reflect their profile and identity. The selected photos are compared with information gleaned from a series of in-depth interviews with ex-employees in order to place the companies in their particular historical context.
 The analysis is in two parts, the first of which focuses on the site, the company architecture and the implanting. This reveals information about the size and organization of the contractors, as well as about their company strategy and professional profile. For example, they used these elements to create a strong position in the building sector and in so doing cement their reputation. The second part analyses a few interiors of the 1961 Van Laere headquarters. A detailed visual examination reveals how these spaces reflected the internal organization and hierarchical structure and how Van Laere projected its company image both internally and externally. The pictures also chart the development of an organizational culture and a body of values and norms that in turn shaped the company identity. The company management, the internal organization and the social and local network in which the firms were embedded, consequently had a considerable effect on the position they occupied as individual players in building practice. The main finding from these two analyses is that these post-war construction players were highly diverse. A critical and biographical sketch in terms of activities, profile and identity is consequently a necessary starting point for a detailed analysis of their position and role within national and international post-war building practice. This article shows what a rich source photographic material can be in developing such a sketch.","PeriodicalId":52053,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin KNOB","volume":"23 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Bulletin KNOB","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.48003/knob.122.2023.3.791","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ARCHITECTURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In several academic disciplines that focus on (historical) building practice there is growing interest in building contractors and their employees. Their contribution and influence are increasingly the subject of research. After the Second World War the contractor’s field of work was defined by productivity, specialization and industrialization, which profoundly altered the professional character of this branch of industry. Social developments and the prevailing idea of an all-encompassing welfare state triggered top-down and bottom-up changes in this traditionally highly cyclical sector. This fostered diversity in the contracting world, yet those diverse profiles and identities often remain unrecognized today. This is compounded by the fact that, unlike architects for example, the source material left behind by contractors and their employees is usually less informative and often fragmented.
This article seeks to demonstrate the potential of alternative source material by analysing company photos in order to better understand the profile and identity of two post-war Belgian contractors. During their existence, Van Coillie of Oostende (1919-1976) and Van Laere of Kruibeke (1938-1989) amassed extensive collections of photographs, which were recently made accessible by the Flanders Architecture Institute (VAi). The focus of this article is on a series of photos from the 1960s and ’70s depicting the headquarters of both companies. These company premises and buildings were the very heart of the businesses, which adopted a pragmatic or strategic design to reflect their profile and identity. The selected photos are compared with information gleaned from a series of in-depth interviews with ex-employees in order to place the companies in their particular historical context.
The analysis is in two parts, the first of which focuses on the site, the company architecture and the implanting. This reveals information about the size and organization of the contractors, as well as about their company strategy and professional profile. For example, they used these elements to create a strong position in the building sector and in so doing cement their reputation. The second part analyses a few interiors of the 1961 Van Laere headquarters. A detailed visual examination reveals how these spaces reflected the internal organization and hierarchical structure and how Van Laere projected its company image both internally and externally. The pictures also chart the development of an organizational culture and a body of values and norms that in turn shaped the company identity. The company management, the internal organization and the social and local network in which the firms were embedded, consequently had a considerable effect on the position they occupied as individual players in building practice. The main finding from these two analyses is that these post-war construction players were highly diverse. A critical and biographical sketch in terms of activities, profile and identity is consequently a necessary starting point for a detailed analysis of their position and role within national and international post-war building practice. This article shows what a rich source photographic material can be in developing such a sketch.
在一些专注于(历史)建筑实践的学术学科中,对建筑承包商及其雇员的兴趣越来越大。他们的贡献和影响日益成为研究的主题。第二次世界大战后,承包商的工作领域被生产力、专业化和工业化所界定,这深刻地改变了这一行业分支的专业特征。社会发展和包罗万象的福利国家的流行观念,在这个传统上高度周期性的部门引发了自上而下和自下而上的变化。这促进了缔约世界的多样性,然而这些不同的形象和身份在今天往往仍未得到承认。与建筑师不同的是,承包商及其雇员留下的原始材料通常信息较少,而且往往是碎片化的。
本文试图通过分析公司照片来展示替代来源材料的潜力,以便更好地了解两个战后比利时承包商的个人资料和身份。在他们的存在期间,Van Coillie of Oostende(1919-1976)和Van Laere of Kruibeke(1938-1989)收集了大量的照片,这些照片最近由Flanders Architecture Institute (VAi)提供。这篇文章的重点是在20世纪60年代和70年代描绘两家公司总部的一系列照片上。这些公司的办公场所和建筑是企业的核心,采用了实用主义或战略设计来反映他们的形象和身份。为了将这些公司置于其特定的历史背景中,我们将所选照片与从对前雇员的一系列深入访谈中收集到的信息进行比较。
分析分为两部分,第一部分主要分析场地、公司架构和植入。这揭示了有关承包商的规模和组织的信息,以及他们的公司战略和专业概况。例如,他们利用这些元素在建筑领域建立了强大的地位,从而巩固了他们的声誉。第二部分分析了1961年Van Laere总部的一些内部设计。详细的视觉检查揭示了这些空间如何反映内部组织和层次结构,以及Van Laere如何在内部和外部投射其公司形象。这些图片还描绘了组织文化的发展,以及一系列价值观和规范,这些价值观和规范反过来塑造了公司的形象。因此,公司管理、内部组织以及公司所处的社会和地方网络对他们作为建筑实践中的个体参与者所占据的地位产生了相当大的影响。这两项分析的主要发现是,这些战后建筑参与者是高度多样化的。因此,在活动、概况和身份方面进行批判性和传记性的概述是详细分析他们在国家和国际战后建筑实践中的地位和作用的必要起点。这篇文章表明,在绘制这样一幅素描时,丰富的摄影材料可以是什么。