“Both orders consider that the country's housing needs, which are urgent and need to be resolved with determination, must be mitigated through the State's own promotion mechanisms, without prejudice to the freedom of private initiative”, reads a statement.
In their joint position on the “pressing housing crisis” in the country, architects and engineers say they are prepared to conceive, design and adopt the “necessary decisions for Portugal to meet the serious existing housing needs”.
They claim to be equally available to help design “public policies” that are decisive in resolving this crisis, arguing that they have the capacity to intervene at the level of housing, urban planning, the environment and the landscape, in order to “think and design” solutions.
“It is important that decision-makers at national, regional and local levels become aware of this unavoidable reality”, state the orders.
For organizations that represent architects and engineers, the State should be the “main driver of projects that respond to the housing needs that the Portuguese face”.
“This is the time to act without delay”, urge the orders.
Lots more bla blá about the endless rise in house prices being caused by a lack of housing, foreign buyers and high interest rates when the root cause of all this is the legal system, which should be simplified to clarify property ownership, and local governments, which through bureaucracy, inaction, bad faith and corruption ensure that buying and refurbishing abandoned properties is a nightmare. In my village in central Portugal, half the buildings are empty, abandoned or ruins, and nobody wants to face the legal and local authority hurdles that can take years and tons of money and pain in the neck to refurbish these properties and thus resolve the supply and consequently price issues we have.
By Andrew Balanda from Other on 10 Sep 2023, 09:39