Housing in Urban Rehabilitation Areas: Opportunities for Local Management in Housing Provision and Preservation
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Legal Framework
2.1. National and Legal Framework
2.2. Municipal Plans and Local Management Strategies
2.3. ARU Goals and Concepts
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Materials
3.2. Methods
- Q1: What strategies do local actors have for promoting housing within the ARUs?
- Q2: Which strategies are implemented in ARUs to promote social and affordable housing?
- Q3: How does the digitalization of municipal procedures and a shared database promote flexible criteria?
- Q4: How can the municipal legal approach be more flexible in ARU implementation, following the national regulations?
4. Results
4.1. ARU from Belmonte
4.2. ARU from Penacova
4.3. ARU from Soure
4.4. ARU from Historic Center of Vila Real
4.5. ARU from Devesas
4.6. Outcomes from the ARU Analyses
5. Discussion
5.1. ARUs in Housing Provision and Preservation
5.2. ARUs and ELH Strategies
5.3. The ARUs’ Role in Local Management
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ARU | Urban Rehabilitation Areas |
ELH | Local Housing Strategies |
IMI | Municipal Property Tax |
ICOMOS | International Council on Monuments and Sites |
IMT | Municipal Transaction Tax |
MATCH | Monitoring and Assessment Tool for Cultural Heritage |
NGHP | New Generation of Housing Policies |
ORU | Urban Rehabilitation Operations |
PAICD | Action Plan for Disadvantaged Communities |
PARU | Urban Rehabilitation Action Plan |
PEDU | Urban Development Strategic Plan |
PERU | Urban Rehabilitation Strategic Plan |
PDM | Director Master Plan |
PROT | Regional Land-Use Plan |
PRR | Recovery and Resilience Plan |
RJIGT | Legal Regime for Land Management Instruments |
SRU | Urban Rehabilitation Societies |
UI | Intervention Units |
UNESCO | United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. |
VAT | Value Added Tax |
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Level | Laws/Regulations/Guidelines | Description of the Measure/Law Aimed at Urban Rehabilitation Strategies |
---|---|---|
Supra National | Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage [26] | Safeguarding of the world’s cultural and natural heritage, both tangible and intangible, including the diversity of nations and the culture of each site. Protection of the cultural and natural heritage from each region or country, as the holder of outstanding universal value, not only for the local community, but for all peoples of the world. |
International Charter for the Safeguarding of Historic Cities, Washington Charter [27] | The safeguarding and valorisation of historic ensembles, including towns, villages, and historic centres, as integral elements of cultural heritage and identity. | |
European Charter of Architectural Heritage [28] | Protection and enhancement of European architectural heritage and safeguarding of its cultural diversity. | |
National | Urban Lease Regime [29] | Application of rent in urban building leases; mandatory works in urban leases: ordinary maintenance, extraordinary maintenance, and improvement works. |
Legal Regime for Urbanization and Edification (and respective updates) [31] | Use and maintenance of buildings (Article 89°): Buildings must undergo maintenance work at least once every eight years. | |
New Urban Lease Regime (NRAU) [30] | Creation of the Housing and Urban Rehabilitation Observatory; the Housing Database; intervention in buildings in poor condition, ensuring urban rehabilitation in cases where the owner is unwilling or unable to carry out the necessary works. | |
Legal framework for urban rehabilitation [32] | Article 2(b), is defined as Urban Rehabilitation Area (ARU): “a territorially defined area which, due to the insufficiency, degradation or obsolescence of buildings, infrastructure, public facilities, and collective urban and green spaces—particularly to their conditions of use, structural integrity, safety, aesthetics or hygiene—warrants an integrated intervention through an urban rehabilitation operation approved in a specific legal instrument or a detailed urban rehabilitation plan.” Urban rehabilitation operations must be approved by the Municipal Assembly, following a proposal from the Municipal Council (Art. 17). The Council may delegate the execution of these operations to a qualified entity (Art. 10, para. 1, point b), and approvals may also occur via a detailed urban rehabilitation plan. The systematic rehabilitation operations are approved through a specific instrument (Art. 34). The creation of intervention units is allowed, and they are defined areas on a cadastral map that outline the intervention’s physical boundaries and list all affected properties. An intervention unit may cover part or all of the operation area—or even a single building—in cases of significant public interest (Art. 18). | |
Law on the general basis of public policy on soil, spatial planning, and urbanism [36] | Article 61—Rehabilitation and Regeneration: Without prejudice to the provisions of point (a) of paragraph 2 of Article 14, it is the responsibility of the State, the autonomous regions, and local authorities to promote the rehabilitation or regeneration of urban areas in need. This may be done by planning or carrying out the corresponding urban rehabilitation operations, or by granting financial and tax incentives and other forms of support. | |
Legal Framework for Territorial Management Instruments—RJIGT [35] | This decree-law establishes the instruments and procedures for territorial management, focusing on urban rehabilitation. Urban rehabilitation is a vital mechanism for revitalizing degraded urban areas and enhancing those improvements. | |
1.° Right: Support Program for Access to Housing (ELH) [39] | The program supports access to housing, especially for people in need and with poor housing conditions. It promotes decent housing solutions through housing projects or renovations to existing homes. | |
Legal Framework for Territorial Management Instruments (Amends) [34] | The reclassification of rural land to urban land for housing purposes is subject to a strict set of cumulative legal requirements: (i) a simplified amendment to the Director Master Plan (PDM) must be promoted; (ii) the proposed urban development must demonstrate consolidation and coherence with existing urban areas, meaning that reclassification can only occur in contiguous zones; (iii) at least 70% of the total above-ground construction area must be allocated to affordable or moderately priced housing; (iv) the amendment to the PDM must define an execution unit covering the urban development operation on the reclassified land; (v) adequate local and general infrastructure, public facilities, and green spaces must either exist or be planned to support the new land uses. | |
Measures for Urban Planning, Spatial Planning, and Industry [37] | Simplifying the procedures for licensing urban operations and standardizing administrative procedures in all municipalities. |
ARU Localization | Urban Strategic Plans |
---|---|
| ARU, PARU, PERU, PDM |
| ARU, PARU, PDM |
| ARU, PERU, PDM |
| ARU, PARU, PDM, ELH |
| ARU, PDM, SIMPLEX |
ARU Delimitation | Physical Characteristics | Population Profile | Urban Rehabilitation Strategy | PDM Strategies | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Area (ha) | Total Buildings | Residential | Population Total | Age | Activeness | Initial | Intermediate | Final | ||
Belmonte 2011–2021 | 80 | 914 | occupied (893) vacant/ ruined (274) | 2422 | adults (1564) elders (532) | active (916) inactive (186) | 2011
| 2021
| 2025
|
|
Penacova 2015–2024 | 21.20 | 8376 | occupied (5284) vacant/ ruined (3092) | 2824 | adults (1688) elders (859) | active (1688) inactive (859) | 2015
| 2024
| 2025
|
|
Soure 2016–2018 | 13.65 | 329 | occupied (244) vacant/ ruined (67) | 7917 | adults (4513) elders (2375) | active (3584) inactive (2384) | 2016
| 2018
| 2025
|
|
Vila Real 2014–2021 | 55.67 | 1014 | occupied (542) vacant/ ruined (472) | 1981 | adults (1193) elders (556) | active (1193) inactive (731) | 2014/2017
| 2021
| 2025
|
|
Devesas 2019–2022 | 30.30 | 310 | Occupied (230) vacant/ ruined (80) | 5000 | adults (3750) elders (1250) | active (1754) inactive (528) | 2019
| 2022
| 2025
|
|
Belmonte | |
Strengths | Recognition to improve socio-economic and physical conditions. |
Weaknesses | No formal urban rehabilitation program or housing promotion initiative. High building vacancy (274 units). |
Opportunities | Potential to introduce tourism-focused accommodation and adopt tested programs from other ARUs. |
Threats | Risk of increasing urban decay and depopulation due to policy inaction. |
Penacova | |
Strengths | PintALinda façade restoration program targeting heritage areas. |
Weaknesses | No direct housing promotion or reuse strategy for high vacancy (3092 units). |
Opportunities | Expand the program to include residential rehabilitation and rental incentives. |
Threats | Continued decline of housing stock usability and growing inactive/elderly population. |
Soure | |
Strengths | Program to acquire and rehabilitate vacant buildings for rental. Façade conservation included. |
Weaknesses | Small adult residential base despite a relatively high urban population. |
Opportunities | Strong basis to expand affordable rental housing and densify the core. |
Threats | Underutilization of rehabilitation potential due to demographic imbalance. |
Vila Real | |
Strengths | Active affordable housing initiative (1° Right—Rehabilitate to Rent). |
Weaknesses | Almost 50% of buildings are vacant/ruined (472 of 1014). |
Opportunities | Further integration of rental programs with social and demographic needs. |
Threats | Rehabilitation programs may not match the physical and social decline. |
Devesas | |
Strengths | Global urban regeneration strategy linked to master plan and mobility. |
Weaknesses | Limited direct housing promotion tools; high proportion of inactive/elderly population. |
Opportunities | Connect regeneration efforts with housing rehabilitation and affordability policies. |
Threats | Inactivity may hinder regeneration efforts despite structural plans. |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Ornelas, C.; Figueiredo, C.; Morgado, A. Housing in Urban Rehabilitation Areas: Opportunities for Local Management in Housing Provision and Preservation. Buildings 2025, 15, 2325. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15132325
Ornelas C, Figueiredo C, Morgado A. Housing in Urban Rehabilitation Areas: Opportunities for Local Management in Housing Provision and Preservation. Buildings. 2025; 15(13):2325. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15132325
Chicago/Turabian StyleOrnelas, Cilisia, Carlos Figueiredo, and Ana Morgado. 2025. "Housing in Urban Rehabilitation Areas: Opportunities for Local Management in Housing Provision and Preservation" Buildings 15, no. 13: 2325. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15132325
APA StyleOrnelas, C., Figueiredo, C., & Morgado, A. (2025). Housing in Urban Rehabilitation Areas: Opportunities for Local Management in Housing Provision and Preservation. Buildings, 15(13), 2325. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15132325