This elderly lady had lived for a long time in a small house inherited from the steel industry days of Amnéville. She appreciated the advantages of her social housing and in particular the garden. But it had to be maintained and there was this walk to get home. Tenant of the Batigère social park, she recently moved to a brand new 94-unit residence from the social landlord.
The residence was built in the Coteaux du Soleil subdivision, a district located on the wasteland of the former Amnéville-Rombas slag heap. Along rue du Château-de-Merten, on the even side, it is divided into five R + 2 buildings with attic.
On the odd side, modern and opulent houses face the buildings. Four years ago, when the project was launched, their owners signed a petition to oppose it, fearing that they would no longer be able to park in front of their homes or that the value of their house would drop.
When cutting the ribbon, this Friday, October 4, in the presence of the mayor of Amnéville, Éric Munier, the general director of Batigère Habitat, Sébastien Tilignac, and the CEO of Batigère Maison Familiale, Cécile Roussel, nevertheless showed their satisfaction.
“The buildings integrate perfectly with the rest of the street,” they said. Furthermore, the 117 overhead parking spaces divided into three distinct zones should allow parking without increasing traffic on this supposedly peaceful street.
“Lots of shops, leisure activities, and the highway nearby”
All 94 housing units are inhabited. “We rented the entire thing in a month! », commented Virginie Swiatoka, Moselle Sud territorial director at Batigère. “The Amnéville area is very attractive. The tenants want to live there because there are a lot of shops, leisure activities, and the motorway nearby.” This is why the social landlord whose park, in Amnéville, consisted only of small houses in the industrial city (around 440 ) has diversified its offer by creating these “94 new and functional housing units, with particular attention paid to the energy performance of buildings”. Half of the accommodations are T3s, rented for an average of €536, i.e. the typology “which is most lacking in Moselle”, the rest is divided between T1s and T2s. The residence mainly welcomes working people (77%), and, among them, “more than 40% single people, 20% single-parent families and 20% couples without children”, explains the social landlord.
Our tenant, for her part, chose a one-bedroom apartment of around 47 m² which she rents for €425. His accommodation is on the ground floor. What she enjoys most is “turning on the heating and feeling warm straight away!” “.
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