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Sóller converts an old hospital into ten social housing units

Sóller converts an old hospital into ten social housing units

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The town of Sóller hands over the vacant hospital to the Balearic housing institute. Ten rental apartments will be created, and the ground floor will remain municipal.

From clinic to home: Sóller plans ten social housing units

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On the edge of Plaça Constitució, where the sun in the afternoon often heats the cobblestones, the former hospital has stood quiet for years. Now the building gets a new task: the Balearic housing institute Ibavi is taking over the house and will establish ten rental apartments there. One might say: a piece of everyday life returning to an empty building.

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Municipality keeps the ground floor for offices

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The ground floor of around 440 square meters remains in municipal hands. The administration wants to house offices and service points there — a practical detail, as they say in the town hall corridor, because it makes things easier for citizens. The upper floors will be converted gradually, barrier-free and with small layouts for singles, couples and young families.

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I was there last week on a windy morning. In front of the gate sat two older women talking about market prices — a quiet, ordinary life. The housing discussion in Sóller is not new. Yet this project feels different: small, local, concrete.

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Timeline and goals

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The municipality expects a construction start in spring 2026; moves-in are possible, depending on approvals, toward the end of 2026 or early 2027. Ten apartments may seem small, but in a small town like Sóller it can help cushion acute shortages. It is not about grand projects, but tangible local solutions, says the rough message from the town hall.

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The apartments will be rented, not sold. This keeps long-term control over use. Additionally, it is planned to apply social criteria in the allocation — people with local ties, workers in health and service sectors, and households with low incomes should have priority.

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More than a building

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The project fits into a series of measures the municipality has already prepared: renovations of smaller houses, conversion of vacant apartments and collaborations with regional housing programs. Not everyone is satisfied — residents would like precise timelines and transparent allocation criteria. Understandable.

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But for Sóller the project means: old stock gains new life. Not a grand promise, but a pragmatic step. If the work goes as planned, by next winter ten families or individuals could be less affected by housing shortages. And in a city where squares and small shops set the pace, that counts more than you might think.

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