- Source: Housing Act 1949
- Departemen Perumahan dan Pembangunan Kota Amerika Serikat
- Canberra
- Taiwan
- Kota New York
- Namibia
- San Francisco
- Abraham Lincoln Davis
- Kritik terhadap Israel
- Serangan Bandar Udara Internasional Bagdad 2020
- I.M. Pei
- Housing Act of 1949
- Housing Act 1949
- National Housing Act (Canada)
- Housing Act
- Housing Act of 1937
- National Housing Act
- United States Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Housing Act of 1954
- Subsidized housing in the United States
- Public housing in the United Kingdom
The Housing Act 1949 (12, 13 & 14 Geo. 6. c. 60) was a British Act of Parliament which enabled local authorities to acquire homes for improvement or conversion with 75% Exchequer grants. It also bestowed upon local authorities a wide range of useful powers, such as to provide restaurants or canteens and laundry facilities for tenants of municipal flats and housing estates, and to sell furniture to them. The legislation also removed the restriction imposed upon local authorities by previous pieces of housing legislation which limited them to providing housing for working-class people only. The aim of this change was to allow local authorities to develop mixed estates of houses of more varied types and sizes, thereby attracting all income groups. In addition, housing improvement grants for private landlords and owner-occupiers were introduced under the Act. According to Norman Ginsburg, this piece of legislation was the first example of a "welfarist" policy in respect of owner-occupiers, as local authorities were to direct these grants towards bringing properties up to a sixteen-point standard.
See also
Welfare state
National Insurance Act 1911