
First price-capped apartments in Manacor: A start with caveats
Ten apartments converted from commercial premises in Manacor — a tangible gain for locals, but hardly more than a drop in the ocean. Why the project matters and which questions remain open.
Manacor has its first price-capped apartments — and still the question remains: Is it enough?
In the morning a few neighbors stood in front of the building with steaming cups of coffee, the sun was still slanting, and from the market you could hear the distant clatter of crates. The Balearic government has completed a small pilot project in Manacor: ten apartments converted from vacant commercial premises, with fixed prices between €119,000 and €164,000. They have already been allocated to residents — for those affected a difference you notice at the dinner table. For the city as a whole, the effect remains modest.
How were the apartments created and what's behind them?
The idea is pragmatic: reactivate unused commercial spaces in central locations, with new electrical installations, compact kitchenettes and without lavish finishes. Technically this makes sense and is cost-efficient; at the same time, this approach can create housing more quickly than new construction on the city outskirts. According to the Balearic government's official website, around 5,000 additional price-capped units are planned across the Balearic Islands. That sounds good on paper — but the central question remains: Are conversions like these truly scalable and sustainable?
Who does the model protect — and who not?
Allocation is aimed at island residents, with priority given to people with longer residency status and those who work here or are rooted in the community. That creates legitimacy: the neighbor's son, who has worked his whole life in Manacor, gets a real chance of owning property. But critics rightly point out: ten apartments are a drop in the ocean; similar debates occurred when Palma builds 82 apartments — a drop in the bucket, many questions. Prices are capped, yet for many households — single parents or low earners, for example — they remain hard to reach. In addition, information is often lacking about how exactly the priorities were weighted in the allocation process.
Short-sighted solutions or building blocks of a strategy?
Conversion is not a cure-all. Vacancies in the old town often have structural causes: shifting customer flows, high operating costs, owners with differing interests. When shop units are turned into apartments, one must also consider how this affects local services and the vibrancy of the streets. An empty shoe shop behind a façade, replaced by a row-house entrance, can make the display-window street quieter. Good urban planning should therefore think of conversion, preservation of commercial activity and social mixing together, as discussed in projects such as Palma: Construction starts in Son Guells – 64 apartments, but is that enough?.
What is often missing from the public debate
Public debate usually focuses on numbers and prices. But hardly anyone asks: How long will the new owners stay? Are there resale restrictions, re-rental clauses or conditions to prevent the apartments from being sold at market price a year later? How are maintenance and energy efficiency guaranteed? And finally: How are the allocation criteria made transparent so that suspicions of nepotism or opaque selection procedures do not arise in the first place?
Concrete opportunities and proposed solutions
A project like this can become more than a PR success if a few levers are pulled: clear and publicly accessible allocation criteria; requirements for minimum periods of residence or resale restrictions; a fund for energy-related renovations in conversions, in line with the EU Renovation Wave; tax incentives for owners who rent out vacant spaces at affordable rates over the long term; and a monitoring system that measures effects after one, three and five years. There should also be combined concepts: ground-floor small businesses with affordable housing units above, to keep streets lively.
Why the step still matters
Such measures are not spectacular. They are bureaucracy between building permits and tradesmen's invoices — but precisely those are the adjustment points where housing is created. Late in the afternoon, when the sun was lower and moving vans arrived, one could see boxes, laughing groups and older women still puzzling over the elevator. For the people who can now plan a home, this means everyday security. For the island, however, it remains a beginning, not a cure-all.
What matters now: transparency in allocation, binding sustainability and usage conditions, and a municipal strategy that combines conversion, preservation of commercial activity and social mixing. Otherwise, local coffee chatter will leave only the feeling: good, but not enough.
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