This paper examines the public rental housing model in Korea and presents a reasonable model of public rental housing. In Korea, public rental housing, which has been intensively expanded since the mid-2000s, was in fact “supply” itself. Comparative analysis shows that our public leased housing has been expanding the scarce supply rather than identifying which model is suitable, and has been striving to stabilize ordinary people’s housing and secure the leasing market. However, the number of rental houses in Korea now exceeds one million. Now what is our public rental housing model? It is important to look for direction on what model should be. As you can see from the case of France, after more than 100 years, 4.8 million homes boasted the world’s first public rental housing inventory, but are there any plans for the restoration, revision, and sustainable development of models yet?
At this point, the study is focused on what kind of positioning the Korean model is in the international comparative context and what kind of Korean form it is going to take at this point in adopting the supply expansion and growth model is the top priority of sustainable development Maybe not. However, the purpose of this study is to clarify the nature and value of the public rental housing that has been changed through the period of expansion of the public rental housing rather than the historical history or policy development process that has been dealt with in many studies for the time being. Just as France has its own French model, we want to find ways to make it a Korean model with Korean context.