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Co-Living, Gentlemen's Clubs, and Residential Hotels: A Long View of Shared Housing Infrastructures for Single Young Professionals

Shared housing is an important infrastructure for young single professionals living and working in the city. Co-living is a contemporary shared housing infrastructure. But it certainly is not the first. We advocate for what Flanagan and Jacobs (2019) call taking a "long view" by drawing co...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Housing, theory, and society theory, and society, 2023-10, Vol.40 (5), p.679-694
Main Authors: Bergan, Tegan L., Gorman-Murray, Andrew, Power, Emma R.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Shared housing is an important infrastructure for young single professionals living and working in the city. Co-living is a contemporary shared housing infrastructure. But it certainly is not the first. We advocate for what Flanagan and Jacobs (2019) call taking a "long view" by drawing connections between early 19 th -century gentlemen's clubs, mid-19th-century residential hotels and contemporary co-living. We argue each have been dynamic infrastructures of mobility, work, and sociality that make certain practices more or less possible and reflect on how the socio-material form of these infrastructures connects with the infrastructural work it does. We draw on our own research study into co-living, connecting our findings with research on the historical housing types. Our findings show that shrinking private spaces, maximizing productive spaces, and integrating services are strategies that animate the infrastructural work of these housing types. By linking co-living with historical housing types, we demonstrate the importance of taking a "long view" when thinking infrastructurally about novel housing practices.
ISSN:1403-6096
1651-2278
DOI:10.1080/14036096.2023.2248995