Madrid
family win case against tourist flats after ‘illicit and unsanitary’ acts
Court
orders closure of 10 rentals that it found had inflicted psychological damage
on family living in block
Sam Jones
in Madrid
Tue 8 Jul
2025 13.36 BST
A judge
in Madrid has ordered the closure of 10 tourist flats in a single building in
the city centre after a landmark ruling that said “the illicit and unsanitary
activities” taking place in them had inflicted psychological damage on a
neighbouring family and violated their fundamental right to privacy.
The
family, who have two children and who have not been named, said they had
suffered stress, anxiety and sleep deprivation because of the loud, drunken,
destructive and lewd behaviour of guests, which included vandalism, vomiting
and having sex in the block’s communal areas.
The
ruling, which has just been made public, comes amid continuing protests over
the social and economic consequences of overtourism and the lack of affordable
housing.
The
family live in a block of 60 flats near the Spanish capital’s Plaza Mayor, 75%
of which are run as tourist rentals. Two years ago, they engaged a lawyer to
represent them after efforts to address the problem with the city council and
the owners of the rentals came to nothing.
“The
family have one tourist flat above them, another below them, and more tourist
flats near their bedrooms,” said their lawyer, Miguel Ángel Rubio.
“The
family came to me and told me that they’d been to the police who’d come with a
decibel meter and had fined the owners €16,000. But the problem is that [the
companies that own these flats and others] can make more than €150,000 in rents
in a single weekend, so a €16,000 fine is nothing for them. So I had to bring a
case on the grounds that the family’s fundamental rights were being violated – and it succeeded.”
Crowd of
people with one banner saying Tourist Go Home
Rubio
said the case was groundbreaking as at stake was not whether the flats
themselves were illegal or unlicensed, but whether the activities in and around
them were severely damaging the family’s basic rights and quality of life.
The
judge, in her ruling, said ample evidence had been provided of the stresses and
strains that the family had suffered.
“The
constant noise, the breaking of shared fixtures, the filling of the lobby with
suitcases at all hours and the presence of shopping trolleys filled with towels
and other cleaning items for the multiple tourist-use flats, thus impeding the
movements of neighbours, have been duly proven and are not isolated incidents,”
she noted.
Also
proven were “guests using the common areas for sexual relations”, multiple
police visits, “vomiting in the courtyards” and broken mailboxes and lift
fittings. At one point, the judge said, things had got so bad that a security
guard was hired.
The judge
rejected the rental owners’ claims that the family was merely experiencing the
kind of day-to-day disruption any neighbour could expect, adding: “The actions
were not merely irritating but also unsanitary, indecent and even illegal.”
After
finding that the family’s “fundamental right to personal and family privacy”
had been violated, the judge ordered 10 of the flats in the block to close and
awarded the family damages of almost €39,000 (£33,700).
Rubio
said: “The family are very happy and very positive because the judge has
ordered the flats to stop operating and has ordered the owners to pay them
damages.” He said he had been inundated with calls from people in similar
situations since news of the case emerged on Monday.
In recent
years, increasing overtourism has exposed the scale of Spain’s housing crisis
and prompted nationwide protests. The shortage of housing stock has been
exacerbated by the boom in tourist rental flats.
Rents
have increased 80% over the past decade, outpacing wage rises, and a recent
Bank of Spain report estimated that almost half of tenants spend 40% of their income on
rent and utility bills, compared with an EU average of 27%.
Last
year, the mayor of Barcelona, Jaume Collboni, said he would end apartment
rentals to tourists by 2028 by scrapping the licences of the 10,101 flats
currently approved as short-term rentals.
Although
the Spanish government recently ordered Airbnb to take down more than 65,000
illegal adverts, a recent study by the consumer and social rights ministry
found that more than 15,200 tourist flats in Madrid are operating without the
necessary licences.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário