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RENTING

Newly-elected Berlin mayor targets city rental crisis

Former German family minister Franziska Giffey was elected mayor of Berlin on Tuesday with a plan to boost house building amid soaring rental costs in the capital.

Berlin's new mayor Franziska Giffey greeted by chimney sweeps for luck at the town house.
Berlin's new mayor Franziska Giffey greeted by chimney sweeps for luck at the town house. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Carsten Koall

Social Democrat Giffey, who served in Angela Merkel’s coalition government between 2018 and 2021, is the first woman to lead Berlin, in SPD control for the last two decades.

Deputies in Berlin’s legislature cast ballots for mayor and Giffey won 84 votes, with 52 against her and two abstentions.

Her party had finished first in local elections on September 26th on a good night for the Social Democrats, who also topped the polls in the general election, setting Olaf Scholz up to become the new chancellor.

READ ALSO: What does the Berlin election mean for the city’s housing shortage

Giffey, 43, cobbled together a coalition with the Greens and far-left Linke party, who together have set themselves the task of building 200,000 homes by 2030 in a city that attracts more and more residents each year.

The roadmap for policy the parties signed Tuesday calls for a public-private “partnership for new construction and affordable housing”.

The new government has also decided to establish a commission to assess the possibility of “expropriating” corporate landlords, a proposition which gained a majority in a non-binding referendum on the same day as the election.

Around 56 percent voted in favour of the move against real estate companies with more than 3,000 properties after a successful petition to hold a ballot.

The commission, to be established within 100 days, will have a year to “review the possibilities, means and conditions for implementing the referendum”, the coalition pact said.

The new mayor has said seizing property is “not the right way”, particularly because of the high cost of indemnities that would have to be paid.

Supporters of the proposal say they would be more able to control rental prices if the properties were transferred to public ownership.

While Berlin remains cheaper than Paris or London, rents in the hip capital have increased 85 percent between 2007 and 2019.

Rising costs for housing have weighed heavily on inhabitants, 80 percent of whom are renters.

Member comments

  1. In increase of 85% sounds terrible but it is in fact only an increase of approximately 5% per year over the 12 year period. Yes it’s a couple of % above inflation and way above any normal employees annual salary increase but it’s not ridiculously extreme and is more, I would suggest, the result of Berlin becoming a more desirable place to live. It’s not actually crisis, it’s just the basic rule of supply and demand playing out.

    1. But the supply does not meet the demand, there is a shortage of 200,000 flats. If the supply doesn’t meet the demand, the supplier will price gouge — hence the 80% increase.

      1. Yes I agree that supply has not kept up with demand but that, in economic terms, is because the supply of property is inelastic in the short term ie it cannot be quickly produced to meet demand and therefore prices will rise. Again, in purely economic terms, once companies ramp-up production, demand will be met and prices will level out. Will purchase or rental prices drop? Highly unlikely. Would the City nationalising and taking control actually work? Maybe it would appear so in the the short term but the cost would be born by Berlin’s tax payers and is not sustainable. Same applies to rent caps as these are disincentives to both the building of new flats and the maintenance of the existing stock. The bottom line is that every time Governments interfere with the market that market ends up becoming dysfunctional. Don’t forget consumers have a choice. No one is forcing anyone to live in Berlin!

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BERLIN

Warning of toxic smoke after fire breaks out at Berlin factory

More than 180 firefighters wearing protective suits were on Friday tackling a major blaze at a metal technology firm in Berlin's Lichterfelde area as authorities warned of toxic smoke.

Warning of toxic smoke after fire breaks out at Berlin factory

The blaze broke out in the first floor of metal technology factory ‘Diehl Metal Applications’ on the Stichkanal in Lichterfelde, south-west Berlin around 10:30 am.

On Friday afternoon, a fire brigade spokesperson said an area of over 2,000 square metres was on fire in the four-storey building.

As of 5 pm, the fire was reportedly still not under control.

According to the spokesman, the fire had spread to the roof, with parts of the building collapsing.

As the company also stores and processes chemicals in various quantities, there are concerns over harmful fumes in the smoke. 

“We can confirm that chemicals are also burning in the building,” said the fire service. “Sulphuric acid and copper cyanide were stored there. There is a risk of hydrogen cyanide forming and rising into the air with the smoke.”

Hydrogen cyanide is a highly toxic substance.

The Berlin state government said that residents “in the affected areas of the toxic fumes caused by the fire” were warned through the NINA warning app at midday.

People walk in the area near the fire in Berlin on Friday. Residents have been urged to stay inside and keep their windows closed.

People walk in the area near the fire in Berlin on Friday. Residents have been urged to stay inside and keep their windows closed. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christoph Soeder

The Berlin fire department also said on X that people in a large area of Berlin and the outskirts, shown on the map in this tweet, should keep their windows and doors closed, turn off air conditioning and avoid smoky areas. People have also been asked to avoid the area. It includes a large part of the Grunewald forest. 

In the immediate vicinity, hazardous substances had been measured. According to a fire and rescue spokesperson, no injuries have been reported. 

A spokesman for Diehl Metall, to which the plant belongs, said on request that the chemicals mentioned were also only kept in small quantities at the plant.

According to the Diehl spokesman, the location is used for electroplating parts for the automotive industry. The Diehl Group is a large arms company; however, no armaments were produced at the Berlin plant, Nitz said.

Emergency response authorities requested the help of the in-house fire brigade from the firm Bayer, which is familiar with fighting against chemical fires, Berlin newspaper Tagesspeigel reported. 

Which areas are most affected?

Pupils and teachers from nearby schools have been sent home as a precaution, while several shops around the site have closed. 

On Friday afternoon, a warning message popped up on many mobile phones with a shrill sound, according to which there is “extreme danger”.

“After evaluating the weather conditions and the corresponding wind direction, the flue gases move from the scene of the incident in a northerly direction,” the fire department told the German Press Agency (DPA).

Flames seen at the fire in Berlin's Lichterfelde on Friday.

Flames seen at the fire in Berlin’s Lichterfelde on Friday. Shops around the area closed. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christoph Soeder

According to the fire department spokesman, however, it was not initially clear at what distance the smoke could still be hazardous to health.

Parents of students at the Fichtenberg-Gymnasium in Steglitz received an e-mail stating that classes had been stopped and all students had been sent home. However, the local Abitur or end of school leaving exams continued with the windows closed.

Surrounding roads were closed while flames leapt into the sky, according to a DPA reporter on site.

A neighbouring supermarket was completely enveloped in white smoke. The surrounding area is a mixture of commercial area, allotments, housing estates and shopping centre. According to eyewitnesses, the smoke appeared to be heading north.

The fire department published a map on which the affected areas are marked. Parts of Spandau, Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf and Reinickendorf, among others, can be seen. People should avoid the affected area and drive around it as much as possible, the fire department suggested. Even if no smoke is visible, windows and doors should remain closed and ventilation and air conditioning systems should be switched off, it said.

In the immediate vicinity of the fire, the police made announcements with a megaphone and called on people to leave the streets, go home and keep windows closed.

The cause of the fire has not yet been established. 

With reporting by DPA, Paul Krantz and Rachel Loxton.

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