thumb|One of the housing buildings, with church in the foreground thumb|A view from block C to block B, with block A in the background thumb|Greenery on balconies thumb|Rooftop swimming pool Alterlaa () is a residential development in Vienna, Austria, designed by . Built from 1975 to 1986, it features distinctive set-backs on its lower floors and large terraces with planting troughs for use by residents. It houses around 9,000 people in 3,200 apartments.
thumb|One of the housing buildings, with church in the foreground thumb|A view from block C to block B, with block A in the background thumb|Greenery on balconies thumb|Rooftop swimming pool Alterlaa () is a residential development in Vienna, Austria, designed by . Built from 1975 to 1986, it features distinctive set-backs on its lower floors and large terraces with planting troughs for use by residents. It houses around 9,000 people in 3,200 apartments.
== Design == The Alterlaa complex was designed by Austrian architect Harry Glück as income-restricted housing. Located to the south-west of central Vienna the site occupies and is one of the largest residential complexes in Austria. Planning for the complex began in 1972, as part of a pilot scheme to expand Vienna with satellite towns. Glück took inspiration from Le Corbusier's 1930s Ville Radieuse and the 1920s designs for terrassenhaus by Adolf Loos and Oskar Strnad. Glück had incorporated a similar set-back profile and garden terrace in his 1971 design of a block for the Junge Generation housing association.
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