build 2,000 apartments on top of other houses

The Basque Country wants more public housing. Quite a bit more. And you already know how to get it without having to go through cumbersome bureaucratic procedures that take forever in the offices. The Department of Housing and Urban Agenda just announced which will triple its current supply of accommodation, expanding the height of 65 VPO buildings that already exist. That is, to the current 937 apartments (and 253 under construction) another 2,000 will be added that They will ‘sprout’ on the roofs.

To achieve this, it will rely on construction with wood and modular parts.

What has happened? That the Basque Country has found a formula to reinforce its public housing stock in an agile and fast way, without the need for complex administrative procedures that would lengthen the deadlines. The announcement was made this week by the Minister of Housing and Urban Agenda, Denis Itxaso, who explained that what the Basque Government is considering doing is building new apartments on the roofs of public buildings that are already built. To be more precise, the Executive has set its sights on 65 properties in which, it estimates, it will be able to build 2,000 accommodations.

Bilbao
Bilbao

What exactly do you want to do? Gain endowment housingflats built on public land and which usually offer temporary accommodation to vulnerable people. Right now the Basque Executive has 937 in use and another 253 under construction. Its objective is to boost this supply with 2,000 new homes spread over the roofs of 65 public blocks already built. It is not just theory or a statement of intentions in the medium or long term.

The Department of Housing and Urban Agenda is working on six pilot projects that will allow it to create between 210 and 250 new accommodations (about 10% of all those planned) for temporary and rotating rentals, housing designed especially for young people who have just emancipated themselves and are looking for employment.

Of these actions, two are distributed in Vitoria-Gasteiz, another two in Bizkaia (more specifically in Bilbao) and the remaining two in Gipuzkoa. The measure has been adopted after technicians have confirmed that in “most” of the public rental buildings with flat roofs it is “viable” to add heights. “In most cases around two floors set back.”

Why is it important? Because it opens a quick and agile way to expand the housing supply, a message that the Basque Government has been responsible for underlining. The formula, however, is designed for a very specific type of housing: public and for rotational rental. “These residential units, being considered residential equipment, do not increase urban buildability and, therefore, can be undertaken without the need to modify the general planning,” clarify.

Pilot Project In Vitoria Gasteiz Vpo
Pilot Project In Vitoria Gasteiz Vpo

How is it possible? The project is contemplated in the Law on Urgent Measures for Housing, Land and Urban Planninga legal framework that is already being processed in the Basque Parliament. “The new rule provides that these lifts can be carried out through a detailed study, the processing of which is simpler and more agile than the approval of a special plan, as is currently required,” Itxaso clarified during his speech at the Regional Chamber, where he spoke of “a novel way.”

“In short, it is an initiative that will allow us, without consuming land or modifying planning, to triple the number of public accommodations. Two thousand new accommodations for young people will be possible thanks to the reforms introduced by the Law on Urgent Measures for Housing, Land and Urban Planning”, the leader insistswho claims that the commitment “combines innovation, sustainability, social cohesion and effectiveness in the public response to the challenge of access to housing.”

Do you know anything else? Yes. Beyond the regulatory framework, the figures and the selection of the first properties in the program, the Basque Government has explained how it plans to build its new endowment offer. It will opt for industrialized housing, a formula that the Executive has stood out already in the past. “We have opened a line of collaboration with the kabian projectlinked to social initiative cooperatives, which proposes a light and modular construction system in wood” explains Itxaso, who trusts that the use of industrialized techniques will allow “reducing costs, execution times and impact on the environment.”

And beyond Euskadi? The Basque Country is not the only one that has looked at the roofs of buildings to gain housing. At least with a social focus. A few months ago the PSPV proposed in the Urban Planning Commission of the Valencia City Council to touch up the local planning so that the buildings could grow taller to add public housing. The plan did not prosper, but according to the calculations of the socialists it would allow the construction of more than 70,000 protected apartments.

The height and the possibility of reinforcing the housing supply have also been raised in other large cities, such as Palm, Madrid or Barcelona, ​​where they have granted licenses to increase the buildability of existing blocks.

Images | Yves Alaire (Unsplash) and Neil Martin (Unsplash) and Irekia

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