CPOY

Gold: Block 1-10

Greenland’s future is being pulled and torn by the persistent interest of the United States and other global powers. Yet behind the worn facades of the many concrete housing blocks, everyday life for the island’s inhabitants quietly continues.

Today, the large concrete housing blocks make up a significant share of Greenland’s homes. They have done so ever since the Danish state, in the 1960s and 1970s, decided to modernize the island’s infrastructure through an ambitious centralization strategy.

The goal was to improve welfare by moving people out of the settlements and away from the coastal dwellings that were considered both unhealthy and outdated. At the same time, fishing grew from something a single man could do to support his family into a large-scale industry, creating a demand for more labor in the bigger towns.

People needed somewhere to live, it had to be built quickly, and it had to be big. And so, in the 1960s, concrete housing blocks suddenly rose from the ground in every major town in Greenland.

In Nuuk, ten such blocks were built in the very center of the city. Decades have passed, but the blocks remain in the heart of town, largely unchanged.

The move from the settlements into the concrete blocks is remembered both as a marked improvement in living conditions and as a loss of Greenlandic identity and traditional ways of life.

Over time, however, the blocks have become so deeply integrated into Greenlandic society that one might say a new culture has grown out of them. This project visits the residents of Sletten and explores life in the shadow of these buildings.

Caption
Slide 5 of 10
BLOCK 4 - Karline Møller
March 9, 2025

Portrait of Karline Møller In Block 4, Karline Møller Hansen lives with her four daughters and her son, whose ages range from a three-year-old who prefers to be naked, to a nineteen-year-old who helps pay the rent. For years the family moved in and out of women’s shelters, as Karline was in a violent relationship. They could not get housing, as more than 2,000 people are on the waiting list for rental apartments in Nuuk—a city suffering from a severe housing shortage. Karline says the municipality threatened to take her children away if she did not leave her partner. She was then helped into a social housing apartment in Block 4. Now she is not allowed to see him anymore, she says. “If I do, the municipality will take my children.”

Location
Location map
Nuuk, Greenland
    07c05d77-1f16-4c59-a938-99288ed85966
    9fda1987-363e-4658-b36f-26e1e7c392ae
    906bdaf7-864d-4ae2-bcf5-d264954c87a7
    cb7617f8-6e34-4855-9e60-9819b1c5d0dd
    8fc67ada-92af-41c0-95d8-2c1a0c9477e7
    c3dae877-fcb3-4b05-a077-d8adcfcf9432
    2d78cde7-a666-4ff9-b0a0-7f32005c3ee1
    c10ae413-0bba-4243-8978-d192f2be8012
    e53c7e23-b349-41f4-a924-34f02834f8b7
    301e6f81-fe5f-4e10-84ab-3e87ffe0c22b
    See more at cpoy.org