Lisbon sells 10 municipal plots for a minimum of €59.2 million — the left wanted 500 homes
Lisbon's city council approved the public auction of ten plots 'forgotten for decades'. PS and Bloco say they could have housed around 500 families.
Lisbon’s city council is putting ten municipal plots up for public auction with a combined minimum price of €59.2 million. The proposal passed this week with the votes of the PSD/CDS-PP/IL majority and Chega — and with the entire left opposed, doing the maths on what could have been built there instead: affordable housing for around 500 families, according to the Socialists.
Which plots is Lisbon selling?
Ten parcels spread across Marvila, Beato, Penha de França, Lumiar, Belém, Campolide and São Vicente. The executive describes them as land “abandoned, some for decades” with no planned use, and argues the extra revenue will speed up investment in transport, paving, lighting and security. Several of those parishes are precisely where Lisbon’s housing debate burns hottest.
Why is the left against the sale?
Because of what the land could become. The PS opposes selling municipal land that could be channelled into affordable housing, estimating capacity for around 500 families; Bloco de Esquerda points out that some of the plots had been earmarked for the city’s affordable-rent programmes for the middle class. The row lands at a sensitive moment: the council’s housing programmes are concentrated on the Habitar Lisboa platform, while the national market sits at record highs and rent control is disappearing from new leases.
Anyone wanting to bid will find the auctions on the municipality’s portal. Anyone hunting for an affordable home in Lisbon is left with the harder sum — working out what property in the city yields, and what it costs, now that public land just got scarcer.
Image: Diego Delso / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)