Amsterdam

Amsterdam faces a housing crisis in terms of quantity and affordability. With its 863,000 inhabitants, Amsterdam is not only the largest city of the Netherlands but has one of the fastest population growth rates among major Dutch cities. The Amsterdam Metropolitan Area is currently home to a population of 2.46 million. Projections forecast that Amsterdam will hit the 1 million mark by 2034. The Municipality of Amsterdam estimates that an expected 11,000 new inhabitants each year require the construction of 5,000 new homes annually to meet demand. Simultaneously, housing prices have skyrocketed. Prices of Amsterdam’s existing owner-occupied housing have risen almost 50% since 2010, there is a perpetual lack of affordable housing to middle-income groups, and average waiting times for social housing have reached over 15 years. Housing dominated the 2018 local elections and resulted in plans to build 70,000 homes by 2040, with 52,500 to be completed by 2025. This massive undertaking takes place in an increasingly complex governance context: changes at the national level strengthen the position of private-sector actors in urban development, new actors emerge on residential investment landscapes, and the traditional planning approach in which the Municipality of Amsterdam is in charge, is increasingly challenged.

Image: Ján Jakub Naništa, unsplash

Recent Amsterdam posts

Fragmented governance architectures in Amsterdam

Fragmented governance architectures in Amsterdam

In a new publication in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, WHIG researchers Tuna Tasan-Kok and Sara Özogul examine entrepreneurial transformations in Amsterdam’s governance of residential property production.Amsterdam’s governance has been long praised for...

Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Between a Rock and a Hard Place

In a new publication in the journal Planning Practice and Research, WHIG researcher Sara Özogul investigates how planners in Amsterdam learn from interacting with property industry actors, and how their learning experiences travel beyond the project scale to instigate...

One and the same?

One and the same?

Our new article in the Journal of Planning Literature confirms that there is limited academic engagement with investor stratifications. Furthermore, it establishes a new analytical framework for scholars to think along multidimensional lines to prevent...