Sassari, 1,270 public housing units to be managed by the Municipality: the administration's plans
The framework agreement for potential works is worth 185 thousand euros and a market survey has recently been launched.Per restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
1,270 municipal housing units to be managed in Sassari. The issue was discussed in the Second Commission, recently at Palazzo Ducale, by Councilor Patrizia Mercuri and the department's head, architect Alessandra Bertulu.
To address the inevitable critical issues facing public housing, the municipal administration has initiated a new phase that aims to move beyond the emergency approach, while simultaneously activating a subdivision of extraordinary maintenance interventions into three territorial sectors.
The €185,000 framework agreement for potential jobs has recently been launched, and a market survey has been launched to find the necessary professionals. "We want to provide jobs for the area," the councilor reports.
During the hearing, Bertulu explained the ongoing work in the sector, such as the one on Via Prati, involving five houses and 74 apartments. This has been a challenging process, with renovations planned and then revised, as well as the redesign of the systems to be installed on the roof, due to previous issues, which have led to tenants being trapped under scaffolding.
"There has been an extension," Bertulu states, "but we will not exceed the timeline imposed by the National Recovery and Resilience Plan." Numerous construction sites are underway, for example in the area of Via Sant'Anna and Le Conce, where, with regional funds, several small and inadequate spaces in five buildings are being redeveloped. "There is a need," Mercuri continues, "to provide the city with 60-square-meter apartments, which it currently lacks."
This is the context for the project, currently in the planning phase, to construct three buildings on Via Bellini, Via Giusti, and Via Grazia Deledda. These three- to four-story buildings, with approximately 10 apartments, should be considered. The Superintendence will permit the construction of the latter two streets, thus fostering a return to social housing in the city.
