Can Public Housing Truly Be Innovative? Lessons from Vienna to Reimagine the Future of Local Governance

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Abstract

This article examines Vienna’s public housing model as an exemplary case of institutional innovation in the public sector, defined by its regulatory stability, universalist orientation, and resistance to the commodification of urban land. Through a thematic analysis of scientific sources indexed in Scopus and official documents from the City of Vienna and the Austrian legislative framework, the study identifies both the achievements and the structural tensions within the system. The findings reveal a form of slow innovation grounded in the capacity to integrate new agendas—such as social and environmental sustainability or collaborative modes of living—into an already consolidated regulatory framework. However, grey areas persist, particularly with regard to the exclusion of vulnerable groups, community fragmentation, and the limited replicability of alternative models. The study contributes to expanding the concept of innovation in public administration beyond technocratic approaches, highlighting the value of adaptive institutionalism.

Original languageEnglish
Article number233
JournalAdministrative Sciences
Volume15
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2025

Keywords

  • institutional innovation
  • public administration
  • public housing
  • urban inclusion
  • Vienna

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