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Sp pr ai op n’ in er s be En ty st gl mag ish
November 2023
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AN historic building bought by Jacarilla council in 2009 from a real estate entrepreneur may soon be restored to some of its former glory thanks to €1.3 million of grants. The Marquis of Fontalba Palace consists of a mansion, a church, and gardens. It was constructed between 1915 and 1922 at the height of the Art Deco style era with the buildings and landscaped areas stretching over 26,000 m2. WAIT: Nearly over for Sanchez
Key vote
THE moment of truth is approaching for Pedro Sanchez. The investiture debate for the acting Prime Minister is continuing today in Madrid’s Congress to see if he can form a government. Sanchez last week secured a deal with Catalan party Junts and then topped that up with agreements with the Basque BNG party and the single Canary Coalition delegate. In exchange for the votes of the Catalan separatist groups like Junts, Sanchez agreed to a controversial amnesty for those involved in a failed 2017 secession attempt. The amnesty plan has split public opinion, with hundreds of thousands of people demonstrating against it across the country on Sunday.
Solidity
Socialist leader in Catalunya and ex-national health minister, Salvador Illa, defended the proposed amnesty law stating that it ‘demonstrates the solidity and capacity for generosity of Spanish democracy’. The deals mean that Pedro Sanchez and the PSOE are now set to secure an absolute majority of 179 votes among the chamber’s 350 representatives - if all the promised votes go his way. Sanchez’s Socialists came second in the July 23 general election, but Alberto Nunez Feijoo, leader of the Partido Popular, which came first, was unable to put together a majority in Congress, leading King Felipe to ask Sanchez to have a go.
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OURSELF A SCAN HERE TO LAND YFRIDAY Your BLACK expat SUBSCRIPTION 50% voice in OFF COSTA BLANCA SUR / MURCIA OFFER FOR Spain S .E SS E R P E V OLI FREE Vol. 4 Issue 103 www.theolivepress.es November 16th - November 29th 2023
Courted by courtyards
courtyards has been The incredible allure of crafty Spain, some with roses, turned into an artform in some with simply others with geraniums andtheir history. palms. We take a look at
See our property special inside
Dueñas VARIETY: Palacio de lasCordoba in Sevilla to a typical design patio and a modern
STAY IN THE NEST! Y
Lack of affordable housing at home into their 30s
is keeping Spaniards
are OUNGSTERS in Spain to compared among the oldest in Europe sing stock is 'social housing' flee the nest. to 7% in other OECD nations. home sound a note By Alex Trelinski The average age to leave hiThe report did however Housing Law, the third is an incredible 31 years, of optimism over the new the lack of ghest on the continent. which is seeking to ‘address regulations leave Only Greeks and Slovakians continually rising prices. affordable housing’ through the ‘difficult transition from and tax measures. home later. and adults living It blames The percentage of young 60% in the education to the labour market’ to The plan to allocate 40% of new resihousing with their parents is over and 50% for adds it creates ‘a difficult transition dential construction to social Spaniards’. units - ‘could case of 18 to 34 year olds, independent life for young half of it for social rental lower-income prices mean youngsters are 25 to 34 year olds. in cities High rental the market, while there is a generate benefits for out of The lack of affordable housing households’, ruled the report. to ensure including the priced housing. and popular tourist spots,Islands, is the critically low supply of council carefully monitored not average rents “But only if costas and the Balearic According to the report last decade that such inclusionary zoning does new projects 40% over the key issue. reduce incentives to start Econo- have risen by According to a new OECD Europe, compared to just 10% in salaries. hou- or drive up market prices,” it added. only 1% of Spain's mic Survey on housing across issue due to Yet, alarmingly, Spain has a long-standing
After the Civil War, the Marquises of Fontalba sold the site to several owners in Jacarilla, and it passed through different hands, including two of the main real estate developers in the region. Jacarilla council took ownership of the gardens in 2003 and six years later acquired the buildings from the Pedrera family. Since then, the mansion fell into disrepair with no finances to restore it, but the gardens have been a popular attraction for tourists and locals alike. Now it's hoped that work will start before the end of the year so that parts of the mansion can be open to the public from next summer. “We will start by renovating the main hall, the access staircase and recovering some rooms on
NOT LEAVING: Spanish
are the third oldest to
fly the nest
Courted by courtyards
New lease of life
the first floor,” said local Mayor Andres Moñino. Complete waterproofing will stop ceiling and wall leaks and Molino added that 'windows will be sealed to eliminate cracks and humidity that have damaged the building. As and when the grants come in, then more work will be done.
Coastal conflict Costa Blanca property owners fear for future after coastline is redrawn BRITISH expats are among the 100plus homeowners in Denia who say they are being virtually stripped of their properties because of a so-called ‘Coastal Law’. The Public Maritime Land Domain (DPMT) legislation was first brought in in the 1980s in an attempt to prevent the Costa Blanca from being overdeveloped. But in its current form, once an area has been deemed to be in the ‘public domain’ i.e. close enough to the beach to be considered government-owned land, private ownership is forbidden. This is the current fate of some 115 home and business owners in Denia, who now find themselves in the ‘public domain’ after the coastline was redrawn by the Coastal Authority (Costas). Costas say the own-
By Alex Trelinski
ers will not lose their homes but will have a ‘75-year concession’ and that demarcation of areas did ‘not imply that any homes would be demolished’ along with the fact they can be sold or passed on as an inheritance. The new demarcation will in one way or another affect more than 3,600 buildings on Denia's northern coast specifically between the Molinell river and the first breakwater - covering an area of over 10,000 m2 along two kilometres of the coastal strip. A campaign group called 'Association of People Affected by the Coastal Law' claimed that all of the properties
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AFFECTED: Locals protest against the Coastal Law
will be deemed not to have planning permission and once the 'useful life' of the homes has expired, they are expected to 'disappear', i.e. be demolished - something denied by the Costas. The group told the Olive HOMES ON THE FRONT Press that at least one of LINE: Some 3,600 the families affected is properties are affected British. Meanwhile, Swissborn Genevieve Chiche owns a semi-detached house overlooking Les Deveses beach, bought by her mother over 50 years ago and which is now on the public domain seizure list. “Costas is taking my home, my garden, and my life, turning me into a legal squatter of a property that had all the legal permits,” she fumed. Also in the firing line is Les Deveses restaurant owner, Sebastian Alcaraz, who bought his business in 1981 with the building constructed 16 years earlier. See page 15 He said: “This is an unprecedented outrage as we lose our assets, savings, and our lives.” Costas has divided the
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affected coast into three sections and has held meetings for each strip. The Alicante province Costas head, Rosa de los Ríos, has been in charge of directing these surveys. She said it was an 'administrative, procedural act', in which they showed those affected where the line that marks public domain passes and how the rights of way go from that point. De los Rios stated that the demarcation line is 'provisional' and does not entail the demolition of any building.
Private
Some of the lines have been marked out with pink paint spots with one resident promising to take legal action as the line was drawn without his permission on private land. Residents have received the backing of the Valencian government and its general director of Ports, Airports and Coasts, Vicente Martínez Mus who said he shared 'their feeling of indignation and anger'. “We oppose these rules and the way they are being applied are unfair and arbitrary,” said Martinez Mus. “We have demanded for a long time that Costas fight against the regression of the coastline through regeneration and protection of the public domain, instead of fighting residents.” Opinion Page 6