Terms of use: Participants in the forum are expected to engage respectfully, share constructive ideas, and uphold a positive and inclusive environment when discussing youth issues in the Western Balkans. Hate speech and any form of discrimination are strictly prohibited on the forum. Please use gender-sensitive language whenever possible. Please use only English in communication.
A regional network of safe, affordable hostels could help youth in transition—whether job-seeking, relocating, or escaping unsafe environments. These should be managed with clear codes of conduct, social support services, and time-limited housing rights.
Instead of demolishing old buildings, governments should fund youth cooperatives to renovate and repurpose historical or semi-abandoned properties. This not only preserves heritage but generates affordable housing through youth-led cultural renewal.
Affordable housing must be linked with reliable and affordable public transport. Isolated locations force youth into long commutes or car dependency. Urban planning must connect housing opportunities with job centers, universities, and services.
Youth often struggle with housing credit due to lack of employment history or poor credit scores. Banks should be encouraged to use alternative assessment methods—like stable income from freelancing or savings behavior—to evaluate eligibility for housing loans.
Urban farming and affordable housing can go hand in hand. Municipalities can offer young people small plots of land with housing units where they grow food, sell produce, and build a sustainable livelihood. This fusion model tackles food insecurity and housing access at once.
In cities with housing shortages, elderly homeowners with extra rooms could host young people at reduced rent in exchange for companionship or light assistance. Governments could incentivize this through tax deductions, safety checks, and mediation services to ensure fair and safe arrangements.
Young architects and urban designers should be engaged through public housing design competitions, specifically targeting youth needs. Winning projects could be funded and built, encouraging innovation while ensuring housing solutions that speak the language of the youth generation.
Many young creatives lack stable housing and workspaces. Regional housing policies could include ‘creative residencies’—housing with subsidized rent in exchange for public workshops, community art, or local cultural events. This mutually benefits cities and artists alike.
Youth in remote or underserved areas often lack access to housing support services. Mobile housing advisory vans staffed by legal experts, social workers, and housing counselors could tour smaller towns and offer guidance, applications, and education.
Land is often too expensive for young individuals. But cooperatives of 10–20 youth could jointly purchase land with the support of credit unions or public seed funds, building multiple units under collective ownership. This approach ensures affordability and builds community.
Housing costs and student loans are a dual burden. One way to help would be to convert rent payments into loan relief points. If a youth consistently pays rent on time for 2+ years, part of their student loan interest could be forgiven.
Create a Western Balkans youth housing mobility framework that allows young people to move between member states with support. Cross-border agreements could include mutual recognition of subsidies, rental history, and emergency housing access.
Create a Western Balkans youth housing mobility framework that allows young people to move between member states with support. Cross-border agreements could include mutual recognition of subsidies, rental history, and emergency housing access.
Raise awareness about the housing crisis through interactive simulators and games where players make decisions around budgets, rent, and trade-offs. These tools could be used in schools and youth centers to build empathy, knowledge, and policy engagement.
Governments sit on vast tracts of unused public land. Set aside a percentage of that land for youth-focused housing developments—run by cooperatives, NGOs, or socially responsible developers—with long-term lease agreements that lock in affordability.
Create integrated sustainability hubs where youth can live, work, and engage in eco-friendly innovation. These hubs would combine affordable housing with startup incubators, recycling infrastructure, and urban farming—all designed and managed by young people themselves.
Introduce government-funded “Build Your Future” kits for young people—offering subsidized blueprints, access to prefabricated housing materials, and step-by-step guidance for self-build homes. This would empower youth in rural and peri-urban areas to create their own space affordably.
Mandate the formation of Youth Councils within housing ministries at both local and national levels. These councils should have voting power on policies, ensuring the unique voices and needs of young people are embedded into the system from the ground up.
Universities should host interdisciplinary design labs focused on housing, bringing together students of architecture, law, engineering, and economics to create replicable, cost-efficient housing models suitable for young populations.
Create a regional short-stay youth housing pass that gives discounted access to partner hostels, university dorms, and youth residences across the Balkans—particularly useful for seasonal work, internships, or short-term training programs.