Abstract

In postsocialist countries, housing estates erected at the edge of urban areas were the typical form of housing investment after the Second World War. Housing estates constituted approximately 40% of the urban housing stock in different tenure forms and were managed by state management companies. After the transition, urban housing estates in most of the postsocialist countries were sold off, with 90% of the urban housing stock becoming privately owned in most contexts. The state management of housing estates was gradually transferred to different forms of homeowner associations (condominiums, housing cooperatives, etc.). However, this transition has generated a number of social and management problems.

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