China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Young urban profession­als get access to affordable housing

- ByWUYIYAO in Shanghai wuyiyao@chinadaily.com.cn

Flexible, affordable, and complete with community spaces for social networking, rented housing projects for young profession­als are now common across China.

They are gradually taking away market share from the convention­al rental market consisting of individual landlords and tenants.

When 25-year-old Zhang Haiyun first glanced at her new apartment, a 45-squaremete­r en suite in central Shanghai’s Jing’an district, she could not believe that the rent for this well-decorated residence was just 2,000 yuan ($289) per month, only half of her previous rental of a simple room in an old building on the outskirts of the city.

Zhang is one of the employees included in a program that enables young profession­als to live well in the city by renting affordable homes, a plan that is jointly subsidized by employers and the local government.

According to Zhao Zhengxiang, director of affordable housing projects with Jing’an district housing authoritie­s, the affordable housing program of Shanghai Jing’an district housing authoritie­s is one of the pilot schemes. It may benefit more than 700 young profession­als in 2017.

“Programs like this actually leverage resources from various parties. Developers can expect long-term operations. Employers retain young talent through offering housing subsidies, and young profession­als who are not able to buy apartments at current stage, can have access to decent housing. When the market offers more affordable housing, residents will have a wider range of choices,” said Zhao.

A research note from Kaixin Capital Research said that China’s long-term rented youth apartment market is expanding fast and had reached 2 trillion yuan by the end of 2016. Most of the properties are refurbishe­d old buildings, or idle residentia­l properties transforme­d into serviced apartments.

Investors backing these projects include investment banks, developers and large enterprise­s that need to offer affordable housing to a large number of young employees.

Some projects now have builtupthe­ir brands, showing that the market starts to offer standardiz­ed, branded services, said a research report from the ChinaHotel­Associatio­n.

 ?? GUO ZHIJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Liu Tao, an armless singer, plays guitar with his toes for young profession­als of a startup who reside at the You+ internatio­nal apartment in Guangzhou.
GUO ZHIJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY Liu Tao, an armless singer, plays guitar with his toes for young profession­als of a startup who reside at the You+ internatio­nal apartment in Guangzhou.

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