Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Housing construction
Housing construction - Credit: hansenn / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
Hugo de Jonge
Ministry of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations
housing shortage
housing construction
locals
complaints
view
Wednesday, 24 April 2024 - 08:34

Share this article:

Housing construction faltering under complaints from locals; 1 in 3 new homes delayed

Complaints filed by local residents have delayed the construction of one in three new homes. Over four out of five municipalities have received complaints from locals about housing construction plans, according to a study by Nederlands Dagblad and Binnelands Bestuur. “People often say ‘we are not heard,’ but read: we did not get our way,” an irritated official from a Noord-Brabant municipality told ND.

Housing Minister Hugo de Jonge isn’t surprised by the results. “Objecting to new construction is becoming the favorite national sport,” he told the newspaper. Homeseekers’ voices are drowned out by “angry neighbor” sounds, he said.

The image that environmental organizations delay housing construction turned out to be wrong. Only a quarter of municipalities have to deal with objections from this angle to prevent tree felling, for example. And only 1 percent received complaints from local businesses.

Objections from local residents are much more of an issue, with almost no municipality escaping them. The most common reasons for objection are that the new homes will obstruct the view (mentioned in 78 percent of complaints), cause more traffic (63 percent), affect privacy (58 percent), and result in too few parking spaces (53 percent).

Some complaints only impact a small part of a construction project, but others delay entire projects, sometimes involving thousands of homes. In most municipalities, the delays last a year or two because locals continue to fight all the way to the Council of State.

“The right to a view has thus become more important than the right to housing,” De Jonge said. “In this day and age, we can no longer afford that. We cannot do that to young people who see their lives put on hold because they cannot find affordable housing.”

The Housing Minister wants to limit the possibility of endlessly going to court, he said. According to him, complainants sometimes strategically take things all the way to the Council of State, hoping that delay will lead to cancellation. He’d like locals' objections to housing construction to end at the appeals court. That is already several steps - “plenty of opportunities” to get their complaints heard, he said.

More like this

Image
Modern family houses in a suburban area near Groningen, Netherlands
Dutch gov't planning more housing construction outside Randstad
Image
Homes in Amsterdam
Parliament majority votes for affordable rent law, passing by wide majority
Image
Street with different homes in Gorinchem
Majority support likely for law to regulate free market rentals, despite criticism
Image
Housing construction in Urk, March 2020
Fewer new homes built last year despite housing shortage
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Swedish drug probe leads to arrest in the Netherlands as international crackdown widens
  • New A'dam coalition planning parking +tourist tax hike, free public transport for kids
  • The Hague cemetery worker arrested over alleged theft from graves and money laundering
  • European Commission tells Netherlands to stop extra border controls
  • Shell names internal candidate Thomas de Boer as new CEO of Dutch operations

Top stories

  • New A'dam coalition planning parking +tourist tax hike, free public transport for kids
  • European Commission tells Netherlands to stop extra border controls
  • Pregnant woman thrown to ground at Zeist asylum shelter was trying to ask cop a question
  • Senior Dutch virologist, colleague accused of smuggling inactive Mpox into United States
  • More Dutch businesses trying to combat staff shortages with AI over wage hikes

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content