In response to a parliamentary question, Minister of Finance Gilles Roth clarifies the current situation with regard to 280 properties that will be turned into residential units.

Most of the former state service properties, i.e. 280 units, have been made available to people looking for housing via state services and associations. All of the renovation work on the 220 former service properties managed by the Housing Access Foundation (Fondation pour l'accès au logement) has been completed.

The National Reception Office (ONA) has been allocated 21 former state properties in Wasserbillig and Frisange to house people seeking asylum in Luxembourg.

Minister of Finance Gilles Roth of the Christian Social People's Party (CSV) clarified that all dwellings suitable for residential use are occupied. He added that some may be unoccupied due to work being carried out by the Ministry of Mobility and Public Works and the Housing Fund (Fonds du logement) as part of a major project. This was in response to a parliamentary question from David Wagner, MP of The Left (déi Lénk), that was also addressed to Minister of Mobility and Public Works Yuriko Backes, and Minister of Housing Claude Meisch of the Democratic Party (DP).

The Airport City, surrounding Luxembourg airport, is also being completely redeveloped, as are seven houses on Rue du Nord in Esch-sur-Alzette, and two houses in each of the following locations: Differdange (Rue Pasteur), Dudelange (Rue Grand-Duc Adolphe), Luxembourg (Rue Goethe), and Wasserbillig (Rue Duscher).

The former customs premises on Rue de Mondorf in Bettembourg is also being renovated by the Housing Fund (Fonds du Logement), so that 11 affordable 4- and 5-bedroom flats can be built there by 2030. In Frisange, three units on Rue Robert Schuman have been demolished to create a residence with eight housing units, with work due to start at the end of 2025.

At present, only 27 state service properties are still occupied by entitled persons in the performance of their duties, the ministers state. The decision as to whether or not to maintain a state service property rests with the department to which the dwelling is assigned.