PROJECT: Mind the Roof

PROJECT: Mind the Roof

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Project: Mind the Roof
  • About the project

    As the pace of change brought about by the green transition is picking up, and in order to explore how the imperative for climate justice can be combined with that for social justice and the mitigation of social inequalities, Eteron once again focuses its analysis on housing, following its “Sky-high Rents” project.

    While a significant segment of Greek society witnesses its access to affordable and adequate housing being called into question, the housing sector becomes the subject and epicentre of extensive energy upgrade interventions.

    Could energy upgrade programmes provide a framework for the protection of everyone’s right to housing? Besides energy upgrading, what other housing needs does Greece have, and how could all of them combine to form a comprehensive housing strategy for the coming decades?

    We shall address these questions by assessing the footprint of energy upgrade programmes, by highlighting good practices from Greece and abroad, by putting forward specific proposals for strengthening the social aspect of energy upgrade programmes, and by fostering partnerships that can work towards a multidisciplinary approach of housing and climate issues.

  • Research material

    FEANTSA study (in Greek)

  • Identity

    The project started in December 2023 and is expected to run throughout 2024. Contact info: a.kafetzis@eteron.org

  • Contributors

Housing as investment in Greece and Southern Europe | Private Profit vs Social Value

Eteron

InSocial

Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES)

FEPS

30.04.2025

As housing markets across Europe face increasing pressures from financialisation, tourism-driven demand, and speculative investment, Greece’s housing sector presents both a unique case and a broader reflection of issues impacting the continent. Can housing be treated simultaneously as a profit-making investment asset in the “free” market and a human right protected by social policies within the same political agenda? What are the outcomes so far, and what are the alternatives?

In response, FEPS, in collaboration with the Eteron, the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) and InSocial, have conducted a Policy Study focused on the housing crisis in Greece with comparative insights from Southern Europe. The research, led by Dimitra Siatitsa, Postdoctoral researcher, National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) and National Centre for Social Research (EKKE) and co-authored by Simone Tulumello, Assistant Research Professor, Institute of Social Sciences, Universidade de Lisboa and Laura Colini, Senior Urban Policy Expert, aims to document current challenges and propose policy recommendations for building a more inclusive and resilient housing system.

In Greece, the absence of public or social housing shifts access to housing entirely to the private market, exacerbating social inequalities and making family wealth a critical factor. Current policies, heavily reliant on demand-side subsidies, fuel rent increases and speculative investments without improving affordability. With comparative insights from Italy and Portugal, the study calls for a systemic reframing of housing as a social right and public good, emphasising the decommodification of housing, regulated rents, and mechanisms to redirect private and public investment toward equitable housing systems.

You can find the report here

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