Kathimerini English

The end of an era for the maisonette ideology

- C O M M E N TA R Y BY TAKIS THEODOROPO­ULOS

When I heard that one of the properties going under the hammer when foreclosur­es resumed last week was a maisonette, I couldn’t help but think this was the start of the last act of an era. The maisonette – a two-story structure, sometimes with a small patch of garden and occasional­ly a tiny swimming pool – was not just a symbol of the burgeoning middle class’s growing prosperity; it was also a symbol of Europeaniz­ation – proof that the village was behind us.

It took some 15 years after the end of the Nazi occupation for Greece to enter the era of the apartment building. In contrast to their pre-WWII predecesso­rs – with their art nouveau and modernist details – the apartment blocks that erupted from the “antiparoch­i” system (whereby a contractor would build on small plots and give the owner a flat or two in lieu of money changing hands) were hasty affairs. Athens was built up summarily to host hundreds of thousands of internal migrants, people who by and large regarded the village left behind as their real home. Thus, the almost nomadic sparsity of the antiparoch­i apartment block.

Europeaniz­ation

It took a lot longer for Greece to acquire proper highways: It wasn’t, in fact, until 2001, when the first stretch of Attiki Odos was opened, followed a couple of years later by the Athens metro. The maisonette, of course, came before these other symbols of Europeaniz­ation, together with powerful cars whose drivers often had trouble navigating the country’s narrow roads. The maisonette was the middle class’s final frontier, its Far West. It was also responsibl­e for the developmen­t of new suburbs, new roads and new water and sewage systems – as well as the desertion of much of downtown Athens.

Huge riots rocked Athens around this time in 2008, overpoweri­ng the state and flooding the streets with hooded gangs of youths in battle with a police force that had been castrated by the political leadership. Terrified, the government could only watch the destructio­n with the same lassitude it did the deadly Peloponnes­e fires the previous year. Destructio­n was regarded as a natural phenomenon and the progressiv­e elite couldn’t come up with cliches to describe it fast enough, speaking of the “700-euro generation” and a “youth robbed of its future.” It was farcical. The youths destroying Athens were getting 700 euros in pocket money and wore expensive, fashionabl­e shoes when they descended on the city center from the wealthier suburbs. These were kids who grew up in maisonette­s and detested the city that had been left behind by their par- ents. They wanted to erase the last traces of the village, once and for all.

When Greece went bankrupt in 2010, the specter of the village started to gradually re-emerge. The abandonmen­t of central Athens went hand-inhand with skyrocketi­ng unemployme­nt, real estate prices plummeted, the central heating was turned off and borrowed money had to be returned. The maisonette ideology lost its credibilit­y and the middle class that lived in such dwellings collapsed – just like the socialist regimes a couple of decades earlier.

Electronic property auctions are the final chapter of the maisonette era, of a Greece that lived its myth and is now trying to catch up with reality, panting with the effort.

The devastatio­n of Greece is not just economic. It is the devastatio­n of a way of life that was ideologica­lly dominated by, among others, the maisonette.

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