This project was a winner in the European Responsible Housing Awards 2025 under the ‘Going the extra mile for safe and sound neighbourhoods’, organised by Housing Europe, the International Union of Tenants and DELPHIS.

Organisation: Antin Résidences

Goals

In France, people spend an average of 16 hours a day at home, making housing a critical determinant of health—alongside nutrition, activity, employment, and education. With this in mind, Antin Résidences and the Arcade-Vyv Group launched the “My Health Housing” initiative in 2019, in partnership with healthcare mutual VYV Group. This innovative concept emerged from a rare collaboration between the domains of architecture and medicine, with a vision to make housing a proactive tool for well-being.

The overarching goals:

  • Design, build, and manage homes that actively promote physical and mental health through thoughtful architecture and services
  • Empower tenants to live healthier, more autonomous lives by embedding well-being into everyday housing
  • Transform social housing into a space of care and prevention, not just shelter—ultimately positioning housing as a frontline of public health

This vision materialized in the Les Allées du Lac residence, the first in Île-de-France to earn the My Health Housing label, demonstrating how a housing project can simultaneously serve public interest, respond to health and climate crises, and reduce social isolation.

Context

Amid the ongoing housing crisis in Île-de-France, Antin Résidences remains committed to its public mission: building high-quality social housing. Climate-related challenges (like heatwaves) and the recent pandemic have further highlighted the role of housing as a daily safe haven.

Meanwhile, shifting demographics and lifestyle trends—remote work, aging, single-parent families—have led to rising isolation and health vulnerabilities. One in three older adults now faces social isolation, a trend that significantly affects the 24% of social housing households where the main resident is over 65.

This project addresses these overlapping pressures with an integrated, intergenerational housing model that promotes health, inclusion, and resilience.

What is innovative about this project?

Since 2019, Antin Résidences has taken on the role of a “health landlord”, embedding health into every layer of its operations:

  • Health-certified construction: 1,187 homes have already been labeled My Health Housing, with a target of 100% certification for all new builds (excluding VEFA)
  • Extension to renovation: From 2025, the label will apply to older buildings as well
  • Holistic services: Tenants receive access to 24/7 health teleconsultation, referral to professionals (doctors, lawyers, psychologists), and support services like friendly check-in calls
  • Inclusive housing: The residence includes nine senior tenants in a co-managed living system that promotes autonomy over institutional care

Despite sector-wide budget constraints, the extra investment required to implement these features—ranging from 0% to 15% of operational cost—is viewed as a strategic long-term gain in tenant well-being, public health, and housing quality.

Interventions

  • The Les Allées du Lac project served as a pilot site for defining and testing the My Health Housing model. Key tools included:
  • A cross-functional governance structure, including a dedicated quarterly committee and specialised project monitoring meetings
  • Creation of the “My Health Housing” commitments framework, which identifies standardised architectural and service levers and allows tailoring to specific resident profiles
  • Structured stakeholder involvement:
    • Design & development by Arcade-VYV Promotion and Antin Résidences
    • Funding from the Yvelines department
    • Resident selection coordinated with the city of Voisins-le-Bretonneux
    • Common space activation led by Récipro-Cité in partnership with local associations and social services
    • Resident governance through self-developed charters and shared activity planning
  • In 2024, researchers from the Centre for Housing Research selected this residence as a national study site on health literacy, organising interviews, workshops, and site visits to gather data and tenant feedback. A digital tenant survey is now being developed to scale this participatory process across future sites.

Impact

  • Project delivery: April 2023
  • Housing mix:
    • 47 social rental units (14 adapted for elderly or disabled residents)
    • 14 rent-to-own units
    • 34 social homeownership units
  • Physical and spatial features:
    • Barrier-free access, secure entry, videophones, adapted lighting
    • All units with private outdoor space
    • Shared garden and open-air village square for walking, cycling, and stroller use
    • Natural lighting, acoustic comfort, and heat resilience features
  • Community and well-being outcomes:
    • Strong resident engagement with communal space and activities: yoga, digital literacy, cooking, karaoke
    • Independent organization of events by tenants outside official hours
    • High participation in intergenerational programs and mutual aid
    • Increased respect for shared areas and stronger sense of belonging
    • Tenants describe the environment as open, warm, and even “holiday-like”
  • Institutional impact:
    • Renewed trust from the city, leading to the launch of “La Remise”, a 126-unit follow-up project
    • Residence selected as a national pilot site for research on health literacy in housing

Lessons learned

  • The jury praised the holistic approach combining air quality, accessibility, and green design with real health services and community-building.
  • They highlighted Antin Résidences’ view of tenants as whole people, with emotional, physical, and social needs, and celebrated the model’s innovation, replicability, and alignment with environmental and social sustainability.
Health Housing A New Generation of Social Housing for Well-being - Awards
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