Data from the Directory of the Social Rental Park (RPLS) of the Service de l’Observation et des Statistiques (SOeS) of the Ministry of the Environment, Energy and the Sea. This directory compiles data transmitted by social donors on their housing stock (location, typology, financing method, occupation, rents, etc.). The data presented in this table relate to the ordinary housing of social landlords offered for rent on 1 January of the year.
**Secret statistiqu****e**: For subcommunal data, no aggregate statistical results may be disseminated publicly if it was produced on the basis of a sample of less than 11 dwellings --> mention “ss” in the tables.
Here are the “ordinary” housing units of the social lenders (estimated under Article 55 SRU) offered for rent on 1 January of the year (rented or vacant for rent).The “ordinary” housing of social landlords (serial 1st alinea of Article 55 SRU) offered for rent on 1 January of the year (rented or vacant for rent) is recorded here.
The figures are January 1st of the year, so new homes delivered since then are not part of it.
Distribution by type of housing: Not all “houses” are pavilions; this can be of the “superimposed individual” (a housing in the DRC, another on the 1st floor with independent access), town houses with no or little garden or courtyards... Not all “houses” are pavilions; this can be of the “superimposed individual” (a housing in the DRC, another on the 1st floor with independent access), town houses with no or little garden or courtyards...
Breakdown by initial funding: Social housing is given the name of the loan that allowed the social landlord to finance it. This determines the level of rent of this dwelling. Today (since the beginning of the 2000s), housing is produced: Distribution by initial financing: Social housing is given the name of the loan that allowed the social landlord to finance it. This determines the level of rent of this dwelling. Today (since the early 2000s), housing is produced:
\- More (rental loan for social use) --> “ordinary” social housing;
\- Plai (integration-assisted rental loan) --> “very social” housing, with lower rents than the PLUS, reserved for low-resource households (60 % of the PLUS ceiling);
In the 1980s and 1990s, “ordinary” social housing was funded in PLA (helped rental loan), whose rates were less attractive than the PLUS, and exit rents higher than the PLUS.
Until the late 1970s, “ordinary” social housing was funded in HLMO (ordinary moderate rent housing) or with other funding. The rents of these dwellings are much lower than the PLUS (often also lower than PLAI).
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