Penafiel bets on collaborative housing: 2.7 million to grow old with company
A new social-housing project in Penafiel answers ageing and the shortage of affordable homes with a community-based solution.
Housing isn’t only about big national numbers. Sometimes the most interesting solution turns up in a town in the northern interior — and that’s exactly the case in Penafiel.
The council is moving ahead with a social-housing project that breaks from the usual apartment block: a collaborative, community-based housing solution, designed to tackle two problems at once — an ageing population and the shortage of affordable homes. The investment is around 2.7 million euros.
What “collaborative housing” means
The idea is simple and old, just dressed up in modern form: people (often older) living in their own homes but with shared spaces and services, to fight isolation and cut costs. Instead of everyone shut away in their own corner, there are common areas, mutual help, and a neighbourhood network built on purpose.
For a country ageing fast, where many older people live alone in big, cold houses, it’s a model that makes more and more sense. It links the problem of loneliness to that of expensive housing and tries to solve both in one go.
Small, but pointing the way
It’s no silver bullet for the national crisis — it’s a handful of homes in one town. But it’s the kind of experiment worth following: if it goes well, it could inspire other councils to see housing not just as bricks, but as community.
Sometimes innovation in housing isn’t a skyscraper in Lisbon — it’s a good idea in Penafiel.
Illustrative · Photo: SHOX ART / Pexels