Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 24
Londoners Turn to Vacant Buildings for Rent Relief as Guardianship Offers Below-Market Housing
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 24

Londoners Turn to Vacant Buildings for Rent Relief as Guardianship Offers Below-Market Housing

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 24
  • Defunct police stations, shuttered pubs, empty offices and closed schools are increasingly housing Londoners through property guardianship, a licensing model that offers far cheaper accommodation than standard rentals.
  • Soaring rents are driving the shift: guardians pay below-market fees to occupy vacant buildings, while owners gain income and on-site deterrence against vandalism, break-ins and squatters.
  • The trade-off is insecurity—residents can face monthly room inspections, limited amenities and removal at short notice, making the arrangement workable mainly for people ready to move quickly.
  • Supporters say the model could ease pressure in London and other housing-starved cities by putting millions of square feet of empty commercial property into safe, habitable use.
Is converting empty offices into temporary housing a real solution, or a plaster on London's deep housing wound?
When cheap rent means no rights, are London's guardians pioneers or a new class of precarious tenants?