Vol.:(0123456789)
Journal of Housing and the Built Environment
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10901-019-09677-9
1 3
ARTICLE
Exploring the mutual adaptive process of home‑making
and incremental upgrades in the context of Chile’s
Progressive Housing Programme (1994–2016)
Rodrigo Mora
1,2
· Margarita Greene
2,3
· Rebeca Gaspar
4
· Pablo Moran
5
Received: 10 October 2018 / Accepted: 26 May 2019
© Springer Nature B.V. 2019
Abstract
Home-making is a complex manifold of social and environmental processes, where indi-
viduals and families cultivate, nurture and preserve inhabit their primary domestic space:
their homes. Shedding light on home-making practices may help us understand how
families and individuals prioritize needs and resources and negotiate aesthetic values and
norms to transform a house into a meaningful physical and imaginary entity. To date, so
far, most literature on home-making practices in self-build housing schemes has focused on
the role of dwellers (mostly families) in shaping their built environment, with little atten-
tion to the internal dynamics of family cores in producing home-making practices, and how
these dynamics are shaped by existing spatial constrains. We propose that home-making
practices should be considered mutually adaptive processes, in the sense that house trans-
formations are shaped by people’s own activities, capabilities, interests and skills, which
are multiple and modify over time, and, in turn, these home-making practices are shaped
by family dynamics and spatial constrains. The current study portrays home-making prac-
tices and house enlargements of ffteen Minimal Incremental Units built under Chile’s Pro-
grama de Vivienda Progresiva, a large state-funded incremental housing programme that
operated from 1990 to 2002. A series of semi-structured interviews were carried out to
residents to know their motivations for upgrading or transforming their houses, the use of
indoor and outdoor spaces, among other aspects. People’s perceptions were analysed quali-
tatively, attending at four dimensions of interest: motivations behind incremental upgrades,
socialisation practices within home space, habitability conditions of the houses and family
composition and incremental needs over time. The main results show that home-making
practices aim to accommodate social and intimate spheres, and that exterior spaces play
a signifcant role in everyday life, regardless of harsh climatic conditions of certain zones
of Chile. Further, domestic spaces were transformed to accommodate sewing workshops,
auto-repairs premises or gardening shelters, thus customising the house by intricate and
evolving dynamics. The resulting domestic environment, in turn, would shape new family
dynamics, producing a holistic, synchronic whole called home.
Keywords Incremental housing schemes · Home-making · Sense of place · Programa de
Vivienda Progresiva
Extended author information available on the last page of the article