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  • 7
    Feb
    2013
    10:27am, EST

    Living in a cage — and paying rent too? The dark side of Hong Kong's property boom

    Vincent Yu / AP

    62-year-old Cheng Man Wai lies in the 16 square foot cage that he calls home, in Hong Kong on Jan. 25, 2013.

    By Kelvin Chan, The Associated Press

    Vincent Yu / AP

    A car passes luxury houses on Victoria Peak, Hong Kong's most exclusive neighborhood, on Feb. 7, 2013.

    Published at 10:27 a.m. ET: For many of the richest people in Hong Kong, one of Asia's wealthiest cities, home is a mansion with an expansive view from the heights of Victoria Peak. For some of the poorest, like Leung Cho-yin, home is a metal cage.

    The 67-year-old former butcher pays 1,300 Hong Kong dollars ($167) a month for one of about a dozen wire mesh cages resembling rabbit hutches crammed into a dilapidated apartment in a gritty, working-class West Kowloon neighborhood.

    Vincent Yu / AP

    77-year-old Yeung Ying Biu sits inside his cage home on Jan. 25, 2013.

    Some 100,000 people in the former British colony live in what's known as inadequate housing, according to the Society for Community Organization, a social welfare group. The category also includes apartments subdivided into tiny cubicles or filled with coffin-sized wood and metal sleeping compartments as well as rooftop shacks. 

    Forced by skyrocketing housing prices to live in cramped, dirty and unsafe conditions, their plight also highlights one of the biggest headaches facing Hong Kong's unpopular Beijing-backed leader: growing public rage over the city's housing crisis. Read the full story.

     

    Vincent Yu / AP

    63-year-old Lee Tat-fong walks in a corridor while her two grandchildren -- Amy, 9, and Steven, 13 -- sit in their 50-square-foot room in Hong Kong on Jan. 25, 2013. Lee, like many poor residents, has applied for public housing but faces years of waiting. Nearly three-quarters of 500 low-income families questioned by Oxfam Hong Kong in a recent survey had been on the list for more than 4 years without being offered a flat.

    Vincent Yu / AP

    77-year-old Yeung Ying Biu eats next to his cage on Jan. 25, 2013. The cage homes date from the 1950s, when they catered mostly to single men coming in from mainland China

    Related:

    'Coffin' apartments offer wooden box homes for the living

    Manila's hidden spaces: Life on the margins in a crowded megacity

    Woman leaps to her death as housing disputes surge in China

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Some poor residents in Hong Kong have been forced to live in small cages. Around 100,000 people in the city live in inadequate housing, according to the Society for Community Organization. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

     

    20 comments

    Guess where they get the money to pay the rent on their cages? They work in factories for companies that make goods that Americans buy at Walmart. If we didn't buy all the cheap crap they make, the people would stay in the villages where they would actually raise their own kids and grow fresh food.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, featured, human-rights, asia, poverty, housing, elderly, hong-kong
  • 9
    Oct
    2012
    11:20am, EDT

    'Coffin' apartments offer wooden box homes for the living

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    Akee, 34, who works as a waiter, rests in a wooden box where he lives in Hong Kong October 9, 2012.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    A movie is shown on a television in a common area between wooden boxes where people live in Hong Kong, October 9, 2012.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    A television placed inside a wooden box used for living in Hong Kong October 9, 2012.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    A NGO worker speaks to people living in wooden boxes in Hong Kong, October 9, 2012.

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    In Hong Kong, affordable apartments are so scarce that people are living in spaces much like an enclosed bunk bed. These so called "coffin homes" fit a single bed and aren't high enough to stand in. Residents share a common space with a toilet and sink and pay about $155-180 per month for the space. Nearby is some of the most expensive real estate and luxury stores among the city's gleaming skyscrapers. 

    In New York City, a similar disparity is taking place, with new towers going up and multi-million dollar apartments in high demand while a similar building boom is happening for tiny, 200-square foot apartments. But at least they aren't coffin-sized.

    54 comments

    This lifestyle is going to be the norm in a few more years, because of the number of poorly-educated people taking whatever low-paying job they can find. Our growing population is another factor.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, china, housing, hong-kong, apartment, affordable-living
  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    10:08am, EDT

    Manila's hidden spaces: Life on the margins in a crowded megacity

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    John Harris stands next to his family: wife Remedios (who holds Joshua, 3), Jamie, 11, John, 16, and Joyce, 8, at the small space where they live under a bridge in Manila, Philippines on August 21, 2012 . John is a construction worker making 250 pesos ($6) a day. The family live in a small space under a bridge alongside many other impoverished families.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Irish Romes, 19, holds her 2-week-old baby Jay at the place where she lives with her family next to a highway in the slums of Binondo, Manila on August 21, 2012.

    Manila's population of 20 million people is rising by approximately a quarter of a million every year. Due to overcrowding a third of the Filipino capital's residents are forced to live on any bit of spare land they can manage, often in makeshift settlements under bridges, beside railway lines and even in cemeteries.

    Large families are common in a conservative Catholic county that is pushing the government's already weak social care system to its limit.

    See more of Getty Images photographer Paula Bronstein's work on population issues in the Philippines in Tuesday's post: Mothers give birth in an already overpopulated Manila.

    Look back at PhotoBlog posts on Filipino housing issues and on the world's seven billion population milestone, reached in 2011.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A boy looks out from his home in a congested slum area of Manila on August 21, 2012.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A man stands next to the door of his room under a bridge in Manila on August 21, 2012. Families cram into small rooms under a bridge so they can live for free.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A man washes clothes as children look out from the small room under a bridge within which they live on August 22, 2012 in Manila.

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    A woman holds her daughter in their makeshift shack in the Binondo slums of Manila, which they rent for 1,000 pesos ($24) a month.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

     

    6 comments

    40% of the population lives on $4 a day or less. I visited there two times in 2010 and found the people very friendly, quite optimistic and hard working.

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    Explore related topics: world-news, featured, asia, philippines, poverty, housing, population, manila
  • 27
    Jun
    2012
    7:42pm, EDT

    Emotions run high as eviction leads to protest in northern Spain

    Riot police try to arrest members of the "Stop Deshaucios," Stop Evictions, social movement during a protest to prevent an eviction in Oviedo, northern Spain on June 27, 2012.

    Photos and text by Eloy Alonso / Reuters:

    Protesters tried to prevent the eviction of an Ecuadorian family unable to maintain its mortgage payments in Oviedo, northern Spain. Jorge Cordero, his wife Patricia and five-month-old daughter Amanda were evicted because they could not keep up mortgage payments to the Cajastur bank. Seventeen people locked themselves in the apartment with the owner and around 200 people gathered outside to try and stop the eviction. Jorge's wife and baby daughter were not present in the apartment during the eviction. Twenty people were arrested. The plight of over one million Spanish people facing a crippling mortgage debt is increasingly attracting public support as an anti-eviction movement places pressure on politicians to act.

    Related content:

    • Spain's economic crisis turns middle-class families into illegal squatters
    • Faces of the Spanish crisis

    Activists from the "Stop Deshaucios," Stop Evictions, social movement throw buckets of water from a balcony to prevent police entry during a forced eviction.

    Riot police take cover from water thrown from balconies by protesters of an anti-eviction social movement.

    Spanish riot police restrain a member of the "Stop Deshaucios," Stop Evictions, social movement during a protest to prevent an eviction in Oviedo.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    105 comments

    Where are these people supposed to go? Unemployment there is 25% and things are not improving. Those kinds of conditions feed revolution. Without massive reforms Europe will go bankrupt. With massive reforms you place the majority of the burden on the poor and underprivileged, unless of course the  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, europe, economy, debt, protest, spain, housing, eviction
  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    8:07am, EDT

    Rights groups protest as Roma families are rehoused in Romanian industrial facility

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma boy climbs on the top of a ramshackle house, torn down by local authorities, in Craica, a shantytown on the outskirts of Baia Mare, Romania. All pictures taken on June 14, 2012 and made available on June 19.

    Human rights groups have accused authorities in a Romanian town of violating legislation and trampling on the dignity of Roma gypsy inhabitants by forcibly evicting hundreds of them and relocating them to a chemical plant closed down over pollution concerns. 

    Authorities in Baia Mare began moving dozens of families in May from poor neighborhoods where they had lived in 20-year-old improvised buildings with no water, sewage or power supplies.

    Amnesty International expressed concern following local media reports that 22 children and 2 adults had become ill after they were rehoused in the former industrial facility.

    The vast majority of Romanian Roma live on the margins of society in abject poverty and pro-democracy groups say the state does not do enough to prevent discrimination.

    -- Agence France Presse and Reuters contributed to this report

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    Roma children play outside a former Cuprom chemical plant turned into a housing project in Baia Mare.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A bulldozer prepares to tear down a ramshackle house in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma child sits on a couch in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    Roma people go through waste debris looking for useful materials, after several ramshackle houses were torn down by local authorities in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma man looks on as authorities prepare to tear down houses in Craica.

    Andrei Pungovschi / AFP - Getty Images

    A Roma child sleeps in a ramshackle house in Craica.

     

    7 comments

    First of all, these gypsies built their so-called houses on public domain, without any authorization. More than that, you could find there gypsies from other counties who moved in and established there. On the other hand the authorities re-located the gypsies in an OFFICE BUILDING! There were no che …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, europe, featured, human-rights, poverty, housing, romania, roma, baia-mare
  • 16
    May
    2012
    7:28am, EDT

    Fire tears through Bangladesh slum

    Andrew Biraj / Reuters

    A man salvages his belongings after a fire in a slum at Shyamoli in Dhaka, the Bangladeshi capital, on May 16, 2012.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    At least 10 people were injured, including a firefighter who sustained burns, and more than 150 shanties were burned down as a blaze swept through a Dhaka slum, Reuters reports. The local fire department said the cause of the blaze had yet to be ascertained.

    Bangladeshi photographer Abir Abdullah, who took the photo below, has been documenting the havoc created by Dhaka's frequent fires for several years. He spoke to The New York Times about the project last month.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Abir Abdullah / EPA

    A woman cries holding her child after she lost her shanty house in the fire.

    Munir Uz Zaman / AFP - Getty Images

    Firefighters work to control the blaze.

     

    2 comments

    Thay have learned America will bend over easy, and after 20 catastrophes in 7 years you would think someone would say lets pack up and move from this place i've got a bad feeling about this location???? And no pressure in fire hose.Duah.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: bangladesh, fire, housing, south-asia, poverty, world-news, dhaka
  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    6:48am, EDT

    One woman's desperate stand to protect her home from demolition

    Reuters

    Huang Sufang reacts as she sees a part of her house being taken down by demolition workers at Yangji village in central Guangzhou city, Guangdong province, China on March 21, 2012.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Huang Sufang, a resident of the Chinese city of Guangzhou, mounted a desperate last stand to protect her home as demolition workers moved in on Wednesday.

    According to local media cited by Reuters, part of Huang's house was mistakenly demolished as workers were flattening another building nearby.

    Hers was one of more than 1,000 homes in Yangji, a former village that has been swallowed up by the rapid expansion of Guangzhou, China's third-largest city with a population of over 12 million.

    In 2010, China Daily reported that Yangji was one of 138 'urban villages' in Guangzhou earmarked for demolition to make way for new developments in the next decade.

    Disputes over land rights are the leading cause of surging unrest across China, according to a study cited by Bloomberg News.

    Reuters

    Huang Sufang tries to attack a worker with a brick after a part of her house was demolished.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Huang Sufang attempting to protect her home as workers move in for demolition.

    Reuters

    A relative holds Huang Sufang as she wipes away tears.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Workers demolish a group of villagers' houses in Yangji village.

    Reuters

    Huang Sufang lies on the ground after a part of her house was demolished.

     

    142 comments

    Nothing that could not happen here in the USA. The people here are allowing corporate power to grow, and since the 1% already controls whom "the people" can vote for it may already be too late.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: world-news, featured, china, human-rights, asia, housing, guangzhou, forced-eviction, yangji, huang-safang
  • 1
    Mar
    2012
    10:44am, EST

    Ghost towns tell the story of Ireland's faded dream

     

    Cathal McNaughton / Reuters

    Fencing placed in front of The Waterways, an empty and unsold housing development in the village of Keshcarrigan, County Leitrim, Ireland, on Jan. 28, 2012.

    Reuters photographer Cathal McNaughton reports on the lasting effects of Ireland's financial crisis:

    Cathal McNaughton / Reuters

    An electrical cable is used to secure a security fence surrounding Cnoc an Iuir, an empty and unsold housing development in the village of Drumshanbo, County Leitrim.

    "If you build it, they will come." The iconic quote from the film Field of Dreams seems like a rebuke to Ireland's misguided builders and planners as the depressing sight of rows of newly built empty houses – windows broken and doors flapping in the wind – stretch out in the distance.

    I'd come to Co Leitrim, in the west of Ireland, to see for myself the so-called ghost housing estates that first came to the public's attention four years ago as the Celtic Tiger collapsed leaving thousands of developers bankrupt and projects half finished. Surely in four years, something would have been done about this national embarrassment – so obvious a sign of the demise of Ireland’s once envied economy?

     But the only solution that seems to have been put into action is fencing off the estates – hiding the embarrassing problem behind huge sheets of wood – leaving the houses to crumble into disrepair away from the gaze of despairing neighbours who paid full price for an identical house just 200 yards away.

    Cathal McNaughton / Reuters

    Unfinished houses at The Waterways, Keshcarrigan.

     Hardly a town or village in Leitrim – the least populated county in Ireland and the worst affected by the over-enthusiastic builders – has been untouched. Pretty lakeside villages with perhaps just 200 residents now have 50 empty 'dream homes' in new developments where fading advertising signs boast of private moorings and roof gardens. Larger market towns have row upon row of once smart new town houses – clearly built with the upwardly mobile commuters who were supposed to move to the countryside as part of the government's largely ignored decentralisation project – now with brambles growing over the gardens, potholed roads unfinished and adorned with graffiti by the kids who use them as drinking dens.

    • For Sale: Deserted French village, pool included

    Cathal McNaughton / Reuters

    Fenced-off houses at The Waterways, Keshcarrigan.

    Impressive holiday homes with 'stunning sea views' lie vacant with at most one unlucky tenant sharing their ghost street with long-abandoned builder's rubble and broken advertising signs banging in the wind at night keeping them awake.

    Surprisingly many of the houses aren't even for sale any more – even if a buyer could be found in the precarious Irish financial market.

    • Ireland to hold referendum on EU fiscal treaty

    One resident – the sole home owner in a once stunning lakeside development – explained. "These were all sold but the developer needed more money from the bank to finish it and they refused. He went bust and that was that."

    See more images on the Reuters Photographers Blog.

     

    Cathal McNaughton / Reuters

    The ironically-named Crest Of A Wave, an empty and unsold housing development in the village of Bundoran, County Donegal.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    110 comments

    There are "faded dreams" such as this all across America ....I have learned from all this to live within my means. To have goals is good but keeping up with the Jones's......I'm over that. Myself and my family have chosen to live a self reliant sustainable lifestyle.....

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    Explore related topics: business, world-news, europe, featured, economy, real-estate, housing, ireland, ghost-town, leitrim
  • 1
    Mar
    2012
    7:46am, EST

    For Sale: Deserted French village, pool included

    Sarah DiLorenzo / AP

    The village of Saint Nicolas Courbefy, in Limousin, France, on Feb. 28, 2012. The entire hamlet was put up for sale with an asking price of just $400,000, the cost of a studio apartment in Paris.

    Sarah DiLorenzo / AP

    The village swimming pool could perhaps do with a spring clean.

    The Associated Press reports from Courbefy, France — The village of Courbefy has rustic buildings with fireplaces and exposed beams, a horse stable, a tennis court and a swimming pool.

    Sound nice? It's for sale.

    The saga of the abandoned hamlet is a story of flight from rural France, bad economic times and real estate schemes gone awry. It's turned the mayor of the village next door into a minor celebrity whose office fields inquiries from places as far flung as Qatar and China.

    The village in Limousin, about 280 miles southwest of Paris, was put on the block last week because its latest owners, who had run it as a luxury hotel and restaurant, had long stopped paying their mortgage.

    The entire hamlet — with more than a dozen buildings — carried an asking price of just €300,000 ($400,000) — about the cost of a studio apartment in Paris.

    Take an aerial tour of the village or continue reading the tale of its rise and fall.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    38 comments

    What more could anyone want? A part of France without the French. And as a bonus it doesn't appear to come pre-equipped with the standard white flag.

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    Explore related topics: world-news, europe, economy, real-estate, france, housing, village, courbefy
  • 2
    Feb
    2012
    5:50am, EST

    Olympic housing crunch: London landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists

    Tom Shaw / Getty Images, file

    An aerial view of houses in Leyton, east London, in the borough of Waltham Forest, one of the five so-called Olympic Boroughs.

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- Landlords in Britain's capital are evicting tenants so they can cash in on this summer's Olympic Games by charging tourists many times the usual rent.

    Homes in the east London boroughs where many events are to be held are fetching between five and 15 times their typical rates as properties are rebranded as short-term "Olympic lets." Some landlords are also enforcing expensive "penalty" clauses for tenants who want to remain during the gathering of the world's top athletes.

    Rent controls are almost non-existent in Britain and some Londoners told msnbc.com that the looming increase in housing costs will leave them with no choice but to leave the city for the summer.


    While the Olympic Village will house some 22,000 athletes along with 6,000 coaches and officials, countless tourists, athletes' families, journalists and sponsors will be left to jostle with 7.8 million residents for places to sleep. The accommodation crunch is expected to be so severe that some residents are planning to rent out their backyards to campers during the Games – which begin July 27.

    "We're [seeing] landlords beginning to evict their tenants," Antonia Bance, head of campaigns for housing charity Shelter, told msnbc.com. "Lots of letting agents are writing clauses into contracts being signed saying you can live here with the exception of this period [during the Olympics]."

    Slideshow: Venues for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Oda / Getty Images

    From Wimbledon to Wembley Stadium to The Dome, a look at the venues for the 2012 London Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

    Those who are evicted or displaced by huge rent increases – as well as other tenants looking to move in July and August – will struggle to find affordable alternatives due to the temporary influx of tourists paying higher rates, experts say.

    "It's all to do with supply and demand, and there's a shortage of stock," Matthew Martin, Greater London area lettings director for real estate agency Your-Move, told msnbc.com.

    As the summer approaches, he said, "there are going to be opportunists ... people are going to pay an extortionate amount."

    'I don't think it's right'
    Shelter's Bance described the case of a couple in the Newham area who will be renting out the three-bedroom house they own in a former public housing project for 15,000 pounds ($23,600) for three weeks. The average rental price of a three-bedroom property in the borough is 1,189 pounds ($1,870) per month.

    In the Dalston neighborhood, one-bedroom apartments that normally fetch around 300 pounds ($475) per week are now being advertised at 1,625 pounds ($2,575) per week.

    And in Kentish Town, which is a 25-minute train journey from the new Olympic Stadium, a five-bedroom home is being advertised at 10,000 pounds ($15,845) per week during the Games.

    It is difficult to know how many Londoners will be priced out of the city as landlords woo Olympic visitors, but interviews with property experts, real estate agents, tenants, prospective landlords and tourism-industry specialists suggest it will not be an isolated problem.

    Joanna Doniger, owner of private rental company Tennis London, which finds short-term lets for players at the Wimbledon tournament, opened a new division of the company called Accommodate London last year after being bombarded with hundreds of calls from homeowners hoping to rent out their properties during the Olympics.

    Doniger said she has been disappointed to discover that many prospective clients are actually investor-landlords who are kicking out their long-term tenants.

    "I've had to take them into the corridor and say, 'What's this about?'" she said. "I just don't think it's right."

    One of those who agrees with Doniger is David Brown. The 25-year-old moved into the top three floors of an old rowhouse above a shop in Whitechapel, east London, with four other people last October.

    It took him two months to find something he could afford – he and two university friends had to search for two other housemates online before anything was in their price range.

    Scotland Yard and the Royal marines teamed up in a show of strength against terrorists who might target the Olympics, practiced high speed drills using helicopters and boats on the River Thames.

    As he drew up his contract, though, the real estate agent was adamant about one thing: if they weren’t out by July 15 – just 12 days before the opening ceremonies -- their rent would jump from 660 pounds ($1,020) per week to a "penalty" rate of 3,000 pounds ($4,635) per week.

    Brown told msnbc.com he can't possibly afford that with a fledgling tutoring business and the temp work he's doing on the side. They'll be moving out.

    "I'm actually considering taking up a job in Japan" teaching English, he said. "I'm not fleeing the Olympics, I really want to be here … The thing is, landlords can get away with charging that much more."

    • Olympics' baby-seat policy prompts wails of protest

    Because of the economic downturn, rental prices have risen dramatically in the past 18 months with fewer new properties being built. Some pockets of the city have seen spikes of 15 to 18 percent – which has only exacerbated the looming Olympic housing squeeze.

    For instance, the average rental price for a two-bedroom property in the five Olympic boroughs – Greenwich, Hackney, Newham, Tower Hamlets and Waltham Forest – is 1,113 pounds ($1,751) per month, according to Shelter's 2011 Private Rent Watch report.

    Darren Rebeiro, business development manager for real estate agency Keatons, which is affiliated with tourism body Visit London, said that five times the normal market rate is the agency's common short-term asking price during the Games in the Stratford area – where the 80,000-seat Olympic Stadium is located. He said clients were "happy" to pay those rates.

    Elsewhere in London, tourists can expect to pay four times the usual price this summer. However, Rebeiro said some agencies are seeking up to nine times the market rate.

    Part of the problem is that the east London boroughs around the Olympic sites are some of the poorest parts of the city and already have the highest rate of evictions. Most people pay anywhere from 55 to 70 percent of their monthly wage on rent, according to Shelter's 2011 report. A "sensible" amount to pay is closer to a third, Bance said.

    Sign it or leave
    The U.K.'s Housing Act of 1988 allows landlords to raise rents at the end of a lease – usually 6 months to a year in London – as long as they give two months' notice to their tenants. If the tenant disagrees with the increase there is very little they can do; the landlord can serve them with an eviction notice at the end of a contract without giving a reason why. And if the tenant refuses to leave, a court will support the landlord and will send a bailiff to remove the tenant from the property.

    Furthermore, many people's contracts are "roll on" agreements that continue on from month to month without a fixed end date. In those cases landlords can raise the rent at any time with one month's notice. Additionally, there are no limits or regulations on how much a landlord can increase rent.

    "If a landlord comes with a new tenancy agreement and says, 'Sign it and stay or go,' there's nothing [tenants] can do," Chris Hellings, advice line supervisor for Britain's National Landlords Association, told msnbc.com. "They either have to take it or go."

    Vincenzo Rampulla, spokesman for the National Landlords Association, told msnbc.com that evicting tenants wasn't necessarily going to be a smart financial decision for landlords.

    "Do they really want to kick out the tenant who's been paying on time all year … or are they going to want to squeeze out as much as they can for the Olympics, which is only a few weeks?" he asked.

    However, Rampulla acknowledged that some landlords would be seeking to take advantage of the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity by cashing in.

    "I know people get crazy during these kinds of things," he said.

    People who own their homes, of course, are on the opposite side of the accommodation crunch, with those who can arrange to be away for several weeks in position to rake in considerable extra cash.

    Kia Ramsay, 29, told msnbc.com that local real estate agents have been slipping leaflets under the door of her Tower Hamlets apartment for months – lately, one or two a day – about opportunities during the Olympics. The three-bedroom apartment, which she owns with her 39-year-old fiancé, is already desirable for being so close to London’s financial hub in Canary Wharf. Its appeal is even greater this summer because the marina below her building is being used for boats ferrying people to the Olympic sites.

    Simon Brown, a British soldier shot in the head while serving in Iraq, has been chosen as one of the 2012 Olympic torch bearers. He tells NBC's Miriam Firestone about his experiences.

    "We thought to ourselves, well, let’s see what we can get out of this?" she said. Preliminary research on property rental websites gave Ramsay, a physiotherapist, tantalizing estimates for the reasonably high-end property: roughly 30,000 pounds ($47,199) for two months, she said.

    "We were thinking about popping off somewhere because it's going to a nightmare anyway getting around London," she said. Recently, she placed an ad on spareroom.co.uk and is meeting with Doniger, of Accommodate London, for an official appraisal and professional photographs in a few weeks. She said if she can get between 3,000 and 4,000 pounds ($4,719 and $6,293) per week, it would be worth doing.

    In addition to the short-term rentals, spare rooms and even couches are being advertised to Olympic visitors. A website called campinmygarden.com has also been launched as a cheap way for people to set up tents temporarily in backyards. One listing offers space in a "tranquil and lovely garden with shade … on one of the nearest Victorian streets to the west of the Olympic Stadium" for prices starting at 27 pounds ($43) per person per night.

    Its homepage features a large picture of British Olympians with the date of the opening ceremony prominently displayed.

    Follow Marian Smith on Twitter at @msmith_msnbc

    423 comments

    These guys make NY landlords look good. Talk about Sleazy and just plain exploitive. If I were a tenant I would never return to that area.

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, uk, london, olympics, housing, rent, landlord, eviction, marian-smith
  • 11
    Jan
    2012
    6:04am, EST

    Violent clashes in Philippines city as homes are demolished

    Rolex Dela Pena / EPA

    Residents of a shanty community resisting eviction throw rocks at police and a demolition crew in Corazon de Jesus district of San Juan City, east of Manila, Philippines, on Jan. 11, 2012.

    Dondi Tawatao / Getty Images Contributor

    A resident is collared by police during a violent demolition of homes in San Juan City on Jan. 11, 2012.

    Dondi Tawatao / Getty Images Contributor

    Residents barricade a street to prevent police and demolition teams from demolishing their homes in San Juan City on Jan. 11, 2012.

    Scores of people were hurt and dozens arrested during the disputed demolition of homes in San Juan City, east of Manila, Getty Images reports.

    The demolition was carried out to make way for an extension of a new City Hall building, local government officials said. Residents have been occupying the space without permission for close to four decades and have rejected the government's offer to relocate them outside Metro Manila, citing loss of livelihood and lack of running water in the relocation site. 

    See more images related to housing issues on PhotoBlog.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: world-news, asia, protest, philippines, housing, san-juan-city

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