In the past few decades, there has been a process of   de-institutionalization of the housing production in European countries   with a strong social-democratic tradition. In such instances, the   government withdraws its investments and shifts them to the free market.   Traditional government tasks – initiation, design, financing – are   taken over by developers and privatized housing corporations. The   public-private relationships have thus drastically changed, but the   essence of the social-democratic housing   tradition – centralized direction retaining strong aesthetic control –   has remained intact, especially in the Netherlands. Resistance against  the continuity of this ‘monopolistic’ and  ‘centralistic’ practice has  arisen in the Netherlands in recent years.  There have been suggestions  for an alternative model based on the  liberalization of land policies  and more freedom for the individual  housing consumer. We are directed  with some enthusiasm toward the US and  Belgium, where this ‘wild  living’ is a traditional commonplace. 
This issue of OASE investigates the problematic of the commodification  of housing production and, within this, the relations between the  building and the land it sits on: consumption and territory. The premise  is defined by the field of tension between demand – from quantitative  to qualitative – and supply – privatization in the housing market. 
 
        In the past few decades, there has been a process of  de-institutionalization of the housing production in European countries  with a strong social-democratic tradition. In such instances, the  government withdraws its investments and shifts them to the free market.  Traditional government tasks – initiation, design, financing – are  taken over by developers and privatized housing corporations. The  public-private relationships have thus drastically changed, but the  essence of the social-democratic housing  tradition – centralized direction retaining strong aesthetic control –  has remained intact, especially in the Netherlands. Resistance against the continuity of this ‘monopolistic’ and  ‘centralistic’ practice has arisen in the Netherlands in recent years.  There have been suggestions for an alternative model based on the  liberalization of land policies and more freedom for the individual  housing consumer. We are directed with some enthusiasm toward the US and  Belgium, where this ‘wild living’ is a traditional commonplace. An  important consequence of the ‘liberalist’ model is the removal of the  mediation between the urban plan and architecture; urbanism is roads and  building lots; architecture is the individual, context-free dwelling.  It is interesting to note however, that in recent years precisely these  countries have seen an increase in movements that question the excess of  freedom in this type of spatial planning, and argue for a stronger  connection between a city plan and its residential building. 
This issue of OASE investigates the problematic of the commodification  of housing production and, within this, the relations between the  building and the land it sits on: consumption and territory. The premise  is defined by the field of tension between demand – from quantitative  to qualitative – and supply – privatization in the housing market.