Abstract
After the second half of the 19th century, the hitherto balanced rural-urban divide was disrupted by the advent of the industrial revolution in the cities. This imbalance has affected rural life and urban migration has taken on an uncontrolled form. This lack of control was most evident in housing construction and gave birth to the "Modern Architecture" movement in architecture. This architectural movement II. It has become a style practiced around the world after World War II. Because "modern architecture" offered not only standardization in the construction process, but also places where a healthy life could take place.
The purpose of our study is to examine the practices in East Berlin that have brought the prefab to the forefront of social housing as a reflection of the standardization of modern architecture in housing. The aim is therefore to understand the spatial setting of standardization in social housing and in architecture.