Skärholmen

Skärholmen is a miljonprogram neighborhood in the south of Stockholm. It was originally the subject of debate about whether these developments were good places for people to live, but today it is a vibrant neighborhood filled with small businesses, clustered around and even spilling into a large mall with franchises. The neighborhood square caters to communities from Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and other places in the Middle East and Turkey. The square hosts one of the best outdoor vegetable markets in the city. And the church, built with the centrum, has open rooms for people to just sit and meet, without the need to buy anything. This recording is from a Syrian bakery that was opened in recent years.

 

Skärholmen also has a theater, a library, and a community art gallery inside the mall, run by Folk i Skärholmen, an organization for the neighborhoods in this part of the city.1 The gallery features work by artists from immigrant and second generation communities. There is also a nearby big-box area, where the first IKEA is situated, with it's strange, round design. One can walk there from the center, and there are always people carting unwieldy furniture packages on the bases, alongside those who go to the centrum for the fantastic array of middle eastern markets and vegetable stands in the centrum.

 

Here are architectural drawings of Skärholmen, which now adorn the bathroom walls in the mall. They are weirdly idealistic. At the same time, a dystopic surrealistic film entitled Stenansiktet was made (later to become a cult classic) about the detrimental effects of miljonprogram complexes on the psyches of the people who live in them.2 Skärholmen has had its moments of community solidarity over the years; I often meet people who know the neighborhood for the Skärholmsfruarna ("Skärholmen wives"), local housewives who banded together in 1972 to demand that the price of milk be frozen at affordable levels.3 But perhaps it is only in recent years, when large communities from other parts of the world began living and opening businesses in the centrum here, that the neighborhood has truly realized the ideals it was built to aspire to.