Abstract
The destruction of affordable housing in the name of aggressive urban
renewal and the construction of anonymous concrete buildings in Berlin's
Kreuzberg neighborhood led to the development of a strong squatters’
movement at the end of the 1970s. Under the slogan “Better to renovate
through squatting than to destroy through ownership,” vacant apartments
were occupied and turned into centers of oppositional subcultures. Some
of these occupied houses were later transformed into legally rented
accommodations whereas others were cleared by the police. This
photograph shows an occupied house in Berlin-Kreuzberg. Graffiti and
banners proclaim (from left to right): “Renovation through squatting:
against expensive modernization,” “The police and the [Berlin] Senate
are a gangster syndicate,” and “Vacant for two years, now
expropriated.”