Spain, out of house and home
The mad housing bubble years have left behind nothing but rubble. Empty apartments and a surfeit of evictions, the housing emergency has spilled into political debates and onto the streets. And now Andalusia is resorting to expropriation.
From housing bubble to housing emergency: in the past 10 years of living dangerously, housing has become the symbol of the Spanish recession and the cause of most demonstrations. From 2000 up until the outbreak of the crisis 30% of all new housing built in the European Union was built in Spain. It feels like centuries ago.
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The mad housing bubble years have left behind nothing but rubble. Empty apartments and a surfeit of evictions, the housing emergency has spilled into political debates and onto the streets. And now Andalusia is resorting to expropriation.
From housing bubble to housing emergency: in the past 10 years of living dangerously, housing has become the symbol of the Spanish recession and the cause of most demonstrations. From 2000 up until the outbreak of the crisis 30% of all new housing built in the European Union was built in Spain. It feels like centuries ago.
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