Million Programme
The Million Programme (Swedish: Miljonprogrammet) was a state-led public housing initiative in Sweden from 1965 to 1974, designed to build one million new dwellings to resolve an acute national housing shortage affecting a population of roughly eight million.[1][2] The program emphasized rapid, industrialized construction of standardized multifamily units in peripheral suburbs, often within 500 meters of planned transit lines, to provide affordable housing accessible to the middle class while preserving urban open spaces and promoting non-automotive mobility.[2] By the program's midpoint, it had eradicated the housing deficit and generated a surplus, demonstrating the capacity of centralized planning to scale infrastructure swiftly under welfare state subsidies.[1] Yet, the endeavour's top-down approach yielded mixed long-term results, with over one million units ultimately constructed but marred by uniform, low-quality designs that required extensive renovations or even demolitions in some locales—approximately 21,000 flats by 2002.[1] Economic stagnation in the 1970s, coupled with middle-class aversion to the peripheral locations and prefabricated aesthetics, left many districts underoccupied by natives and increasingly populated by immigrants, fostering socioeconomic segregation and urban decay in areas like Stockholm's Rinkeby, Tensta, and Husby.[2] These outcomes underscored the perils of disregarding market dynamics and demographic shifts in grand-scale planning, transforming intended egalitarian housing into concentrations of disadvantage amid Sweden's evolving immigration patterns.[2][1]