Year-round residents, equal rules and youth housing: Quintana, Balmori and Piedra call for planning that starts from those who live there.
Quintana, Balmori and Piedra
Year-round residents, equal rules and youth housing: Quintana, Balmori and Piedra call for planning that starts from those who live there.
Own identity and clear boundaries: Bricia claims it is not a neighbourhood of Posada and asks for protection from speculative pressure.
Tourism overcrowding and everyday life: Niembro and Barro call for balance between economy, landscape and residents’ wellbeing.
Typology, acquired rights and economic alternatives: La Portilla and Pancar open the debate on how to build Llanes’ future.
Urban status without urban services: Poo questions its classification and proposes diversifying its economy beyond tourism.
Plots, paths and low density: La Galguera and Soberrón defend a village form that does not want to become a dense development.
Twenty-first-century services in a mountain village: Purón calls for sanitation, connection and adapted rural rules to fight depopulation.
Between FEVE, motorway and coast: Vidiago, Riego and Puertas ask for clarity to grow and improve without being blocked by external infrastructure.
Pending sanitation and uncertain land: Pendueles and Buelna ask for clarity to remain in a territory caught between coast, mountains and motorway.
Sanitation, water and connection: Valle Oscuro opens the process by calling for basic services so that living in the valley remains possible.
Pría, 19 Oct. 19:00h [Reunión 20/27] [Código: 20-P] Reunión celebrada en Escuelas de Pría. Convocados: Llames, Garaña, Villanueva, La Pesa, Silviella, Piñeres y Belmonte de Pría Asistentes: 21 Estos pueblos se encuentran en una zona de gran atractivo natural y ello comporta una lucha entre el proteccionismo y el beneficio turístico. Falta mejorar servicios de
Tourism, traffic and economic diversification: Villa de Llanes reflects on how to balance everyday life with the long-term future of the municipality.