A 78-year-old Espoo man with limited mobility has been trapped in his fourth-floor flat for two weeks as his landlord, Espoon Asunnot, refused to provide alternative accommodation during a lift refurbishment that has rendered the building inaccessible. Matti Hassinen, who relies on the elevator to leave his home, told Helsingin Sanomat on Saturday that the housing company’s decision has left him isolated, with no way to reach the street or receive visitors. “I can’t even get my groceries delivered because the courier can’t reach my door,” Hassinen said. Espoon Asunnot confirmed it has no policy of relocating tenants whose health depends on elevator access during maintenance, citing fire safety and insurance constraints .
The incident highlights a growing gap in Finnish housing policy: while municipalities mandate accessibility upgrades in older buildings, they rarely fund or guarantee temporary housing for vulnerable residents. Finland’s 2025 Housing Act requires lifts in multi-storey blocks to be retrofitted by 2030, but leaves landlords to manage displacement risks without state support. Espoon Asunnot’s director of property management, Anna-Maija Laine, acknowledged the policy gap but said the company lacks budgeted contingency flats and must prioritise works that meet statutory deadlines. “We sympathise, but our legal obligation is to complete the renovation on schedule,” Laine told HS.
Across Europe, similar tensions are emerging as ageing housing stock collides with accessibility laws. In Germany, where owner-occupation rates are among the EU’s lowest, a survey by Die Welt this week found 62% of respondents in major cities now consider buying a home “unaffordable,” up from 48% in 2023 . The article warns that rising construction costs and stricter energy standards are pricing mid-income households out of both rental and purchase markets, creating a “ticking social bomb.”
In Finland, the government has pledged €50 million in 2026 to subsidise temporary housing for accessibility-related relocations, but the funds are tied to municipal applications and have yet to reach Espoo. Hassinen’s case has prompted local disability advocates to demand an emergency protocol. “Every day without a lift is a violation of basic rights,” said Sanni Lehtonen of the Finnish Association of People with Physical Disabilities. “If the state won’t act, courts will.”
For now, Hassinen’s neighbours are carrying his shopping and posting his mail, while the lift repair drags on. Espoon Asunnot says it will install a temporary stair-climbing chair within days, but Hassinen doubts it will solve his isolation. “I feel like a prisoner in my own home,” he said. “And no one seems to care.”
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