Thursday, April 2, 2009

Public Housing

Public housing is a form of housing tenure in which the property is owned by a government authority, which may be central or local. Social housing is an umbrella term referring to rental housing which may be owned and managed by the state, by not-for-profit organizations, or by a combination of the two, usually with the aim of providing affordable housing.


Construction of the new Woodward's development in Downtown Eastside, Vancouver.


Local authority tower block in Cwmbrân, South Wales



HDB-built flats in Singapore.


Unlike that of many other countries, much of the NZ state housing of the 20th century was in the form of detached single-family houses similar (if not as luxurious) as the normal Kiwi house. Aerial photograph of a 1947 development in Oranga, Auckland.


St.James Town apartments in downtown Toronto.

A block in Seacroft, Leeds.


Cité Balzac in Vitry Sur Seine, France.


Older and smaller flats in Tallinn, Estonia.

Public housing was only built with the blessing of the local government, and projects were almost never built on suburban greenfields , but through regeneration of older neighborhoods. The destruction of tenements and eviction of their low-income residents consistently created problems in nearby neighborhoods with "soft" real estate markets.

Houses, apartments or other residential units are usually subsidized on a rent-geared-to-income (RGI) basis. Some communities have now embraced a mixed income, with both assisted and market rents, when allocating homes as they become available.

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