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Pied-à-terre
Small secondary residence used for work
Small secondary residence used for work
A pied-à-terre (, plural: pieds-à-terre; French for "foot on the ground") is a small living unit, e.g., apartment or condominium, often located in a large city and not used as an individual's primary residence. The term implies use of the property as a temporary second residence, but not a holiday home, either for part of the year or part of the work week, usually by a reasonably wealthy person. If the owner's primary residence is nearby, the term also implies that the residence allows the owner to use their primary residence as a vacation home.
Pieds-à-terre attracted discussion during the 2010s in Paris and New York, where they are argued to cause a reduction in the overall housing supply. A tax on such units has been discussed since 2014.
Legislation of pieds-à-terre
New York
In 2014, The New York Times reported 57% of units on one three-block stretch of midtown Manhattan were vacant over half of the year. Many of the buildings mentioned border Central Park and have become known as Billionaires' Row. New York State Senator Liz Krueger, whose district includes Midtown, stated:
My district has some of the most expensive land values in the world — I’m ground zero for the issue of foreign buyers. I met with a developer who is building one of those billionaire buildings on 57th Street and he told me, "Don't worry, you won't need any more services, because the buyers won't be sending their kids to school here, there won't be traffic."
Some cooperative buildings in New York City have restrictions on pied-à-terre purchasers. However, a 2019 bill in the New York State Assembly that would place a recurring tax on luxury pieds-à-terre was blocked after intense pressure from real estate developers and their lobbyists.
France
In the Parisian real estate market, mini-apartments measuring a few square metres often less than 8 m2 are sold or rented to people who work or study in Paris during the week but live elsewhere. As of 2010, French cities with more than 200,000 inhabitants have a minimum one-year lease for apartments in order to crack down on pieds-à-terre that are offered as short-term rentals.
Netherlands
In Amsterdam, a house must be above a certain rental value to be classified as a pied-à-terre. If the owner of such a house lets their children live in it, then all children should be registered in that municipality. In addition to students, politicians and many television personalities own pieds-à-terre in Amsterdam while they live elsewhere.
Many ministers and deputies own pieds-à-terre in The Hague although remain registered in their own municipality.
References
References
- Woolsey, Matt. (11 May 2007). "Choice Cities for a Pied-A-Terre".
- (27 August 2021). "Return of the Pied-à-terre". The New York Times.
- (2004). "Second homes and local development: Issues arising from Cape Town's De Waterkant". GeoJournal.
- Rafferty, Jean. (6 July 2010). "To Address Its Housing Shortage, Paris Cracks Down on Pied-à-Terre Rentals". The New York Times.
- (13 March 2019). "How a $238 Million Penthouse Turned a Long-Shot Tax on the Rich Into Reality". The New York Times.
- Mays, Jeffery C.. (9 February 2019). "The $238 Million Penthouse Provokes a Fierce Response: Tax It". The New York Times.
- (24 October 2014). "Pieds-à-Terre Owners Dominate Some New York Buildings". [[The New York Times]].
- Vecsey, Laura. (7 April 2015). "What is a Pied-à-Terre?".
- (29 March 2019). "N.Y. Had a Plan for a 'Pied-à-Terre' Tax on Expensive Homes. The Real Estate Industry Stopped It.". The New York Times.
- "Mag ik een 2e woning (pied-à-terre) aanhouden in Amsterdam?".
- (2015-07-14). "Ex'tent {{!}} Eckart Wintzen » Onze collectieve verplaatsingsdrift in feiten en cijfers".
- (2015-07-14). "Mijn Amsterdamse pied-à-terre".
- (2019-03-21). "Albert Verlinde koopt miljoenenpand in PC Hooftstraat (Foto's) {{!}} Quote".
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