Council housing and slum clearance : typical of the suburban low density housing around Edinburgh In the twentieth century the distinctive Scottish use of stone architecture declined as it was replaced by cheaper alternatives such as
Portland cement, concrete, and mass-production brick. Stone would however be retained as a material for some housing stock in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dumfries, and would undergo revivals. During the First World War, the government became increasingly aware of Scotland's housing problems, particularly after the
Glasgow rent strike of 1915. A royal commission of 1917 reported on the "unspeakably filthy privy-
middens in many of the mining areas, badly constructed incurably damp labourers' cottages on farms, whole townships unfit for human occupation in the crofting counties and islands ... groups of lightless and unventilated houses in the older burghs, clotted masses of slums in the great cities". The result was a massive programme of
council house building. Many early council houses were built on
greenfield sites away from the pollution of the city, often constructed of
semi-detached homes or
terraced cottages.
Knightswood, north-west of Glasgow, was built as a show piece from 1923 to 1929, with a library, social centre and seven shopping "parades". laid out with squares and crescents. They helped make the fortunes of builders including
Miller Homes, Ford and Torrie and Mactaggart and Mickel.
Post-war planning , Glasgow From the mid-twentieth century, public architecture became more utilitarian, as part of the impulse to produce a comprehensive
welfare state and the influence of
Modernism. The main thrust of post-war planning was in clearance and rebuilding. The process began in
Paisley, where from 1955 the populations of districts were decanted, the buildings demolished and rebuilding began. The result in the first district, George Street/ Canal Street, were low flats built in render and reused rubble around landscaped courtyards, with a 15-storey tower at one end. As the post-war desire for urban regeneration gained momentum it would focus on the
tower block, championed in Glasgow by
David Gibson, convener of the city housing committee. Projects like the
brutalist Red Road Flats (1964–69) originally offered hope of a new beginning and an escape from the overcrowded nineteenth-century tenements of the city, but lacked a sufficient infrastructure and soon deteriorated. They also made extensive use of
asbestos as a fire retardant, leading to long-term health problems for builders and residents.
Robert Matthew (1906–75) and
Basil Spence (1907–76) were responsible for redeveloping the
Gorbals in Glasgow. Cumbernauld was praised for its architecture when first built, but the uncompleted centre and the layout of the town in general, were receiving heavy criticism by the twenty-first century: its modernist architecture described by one resident as "the lego fantasy of an unhappy child". The brutalist tendency in comprehensive Scottish urban planning would be derided by critics for its "tabula rasa planning" and "architect's arrogance". The introduction of the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988 merged the SSHA with the Scottish Housing Association to form
Scottish Homes, which had duty to provide housing stock, but did not retain possession, reducing the role of the state sector and the overall direction of planning by local authorities.
Private building and urban renewal The drive to use housing to transform and reorder society subsided in the 1970s. Under the Scottish Parliament, Scottish Homes was abolished and replaced by
Communities Scotland in 2001, which had a responsibility to provide affordable housing and environmental improvement. There have also been attempts at preserving the surviving Glasgow tenements, many of which have been renovated, restored to their original pink and honeyed sandstone from the black fronts created by pollution and brought up to modern standards of accommodation. Urban regeneration has also been attempted in areas of post-industrial decline, such as the
Merchant City in Glasgow, which was returned to housing from the 1980s, with warehouse loft conversions and more recently the waterfront in Edinburgh, resulting in a return of resident populations to major urban centres.
Supported housing Supported housing in Scotland, such as
sheltered housing, extra care provision,
retirement housing, supported or assisted living accommodation and temporary or emergency accommodation, is commissioned by individual local authorities. Local authorities, registered social landlords, private companies, voluntary organisations and health and social care partnerships are all involved in providing supported housing. ==Modern households==