4.7 m2: Paris takes action against the rental of tiny apartments

Small, smaller, even smaller – in Paris there are numerous one-bedroom apartments for rent that are unimaginably and often unacceptably tiny. In a hair-raising case, the city is now taking action once morest the rental of a 4.7 square meter apartment for which a waiter pays a monthly rent of 550 euros, as reported by the newspaper “Le Parisien”.

When the 42-year-old climbs onto his loft bed, acrobatics are required because there is only 50 centimeters of space between the mattress and the ceiling. “I only come here to sleep, otherwise it’s depressing,” he said. The city has now declared the room uninhabitable and wants to assist the waiter under civil law.

Six applicants for an illegal small apartment

The law actually stipulates that an apartment must consist of at least one main room with a surface of at least nine square meters, a ceiling height of at least 2.20 meters or a volume of 20 cubic meters.

In this case, the landlady had simply written a volume of 24 cubic meters in the lease, twice the actual size, the newspaper wrote. Waiter Massi, who comes from Algeria, paid 300 euros to a real estate agency when he arrived in Paris in 2018, and he queued for the room with six other candidates.

Former servants’ quarters

The case of Massi’s mini room illustrates the housing crisis in the French capital, said the spokesman for the association “Right to Housing” (DAL), Jean-Baptiste Eyraud, the “Parisien”. Landlords take advantage of this and offer impossible quarters. As a person responsible for the city’s housing authority explained, there are 58,000 former servants’ rooms in Paris, the “chambres de bonne”, which are less than eight square meters in size and are sometimes rented out.

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