Lorca wants to improve his appearance. So he will fine those who hang clothes on their balconies with up to 1,500 euros.

It doesn’t matter where you live, whether it’s a big city or a town with a few thousand inhabitants, chances are that if you take a walk through the streets of the center and look at the facades, you’ll come across a neighbor who uses their balcony to dry their laundry. Perhaps with a clothesline or perhaps by hanging clothes directly over railings or window frames. In Lorca (Region of Murcia, 99,000 neighbors) that is about to change. There the City Council has decided that practices like this tarnish the image of the town, so they want to punish them with fines of up to 1,500 euros. They are not the first in declaring war on such customs, although their fines are especially large. What has happened? That in Lorca they want to put an end to a relatively common image in the cities and towns of Spain: balconies and facades with clothes hanging. A few days ago, its City Council agreed (with the votes of the PP and Vox) to modify the ordinance which since 2010 has been combating “antisocial actions” in the town. The idea is to add a new section to “protect the image of buildings, facades and spaces visible” from the street. And that involves, among other things, ending the indiscriminate use of clotheslines. What exactly have you decided? The idea, clarify from the City Council, is to prohibit “all kinds of acts or behaviors that negatively affect” the image of buildings and the urban environment, “causing their degradation.” It sounds somewhat vague, but the truth is that its promoters distinguish between two types of very specific infractions: minor ones, which will be punished with fines of between 151 and 750 euros, and serious ones, whose penalty can go up to 1,500. Do we know anything else? Yes. Although the update of the ordinance has not yet been published in the Official Gazette of the Region of Murcia (BORM), the City Council has launched a statement in which it details what behaviors it will sanction from now on. If we talk about “minor infractions”, which can lead to fines of up to 750 euros, mention three: a) Hang all kinds of clothes on the balcony railings and on the lower lintels of the windows. b) Accumulate belongings on the balconies such as mattresses, bed bases, butane cylinders, as well as any other element unrelated to the proper use of this space in the home. c) Do not remove signage, awnings, plaques and banners from businesses once their activity has ceased. And serious infractions? Those are the ones that will cost the most to the residents of Lorca, who may face fines of between 751 and 1,500 euros. While waiting for the new restrictions to be officially reflected in the 2010 ordinance, the City Council has advanced in your statement What practices will be considered “serious violations” from now on: a) The installation of clotheslines on the main façade of buildings unless they are located in spaces provided for this purpose or protected by screens or lattices that are aesthetically integrated into the environment. b) Failure to remove air conditioning units or smoke vents on the facades of buildings that are in poor condition. Is it that important? If we ask the Lorca City Council, the answer is yes. Its mayor, Fulgencio Gil, claims that “the objective is to raise awareness, order and improve coexistence”, and insists: “The state of facades, balconies and elements visible from the public street is part of the general perception of Lorca, so this ordinance supports exemplary behavior.” And although the City Council argues that the change will adapt the 2010 ordinance to the “new needs”, it also assures that it has been promoted largely because the local residents themselves demanded it. “It responds to a growing demand from neighbors, social groups and citizen associations, who have been demanding more specific regulation in the face of situations that deteriorate the urban image and generate a feeling of abandonment in different neighborhoods and areas of the urban area,” remark. Is it a unique case? Not quite. Lorca is not the first city council in Spain to clarify what can be done (and what cannot) on the balconies of buildings. Vigo Lighthouse remember For example, in the Galician city, local regulations also restrict hanging clothes on balconies in such a way that they are visible from the street, in addition to shaking clothes, emptying washing buckets on the sidewalks or hanging decorations on balconies that may pose a danger to pedestrians. In other parts of Spain, like Andalusiathere are also localities that regulate the hanging of clothes on terraces. The same thing happens in big cities, like Barcelonawhere in 2025 a rumor circulated that a new measure was going to be adopted to tighten control, when in reality the issue has been regulated since the 90s. In Madrid, the issue is addressed in the Urban Planning Standardswhich clarify that clotheslines must have “a protection system that makes it difficult to see the clothes from public roads” and “they cannot be integrated into balconies.” Image | Fernando (Flickr) In Xataka | If there are elderly people in your building, an elevator can be installed without the board’s approval. The key: the Horizontal Property Law

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