© Irish Independent |
29 Jan '20 |
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Huge majority of Docklands tenants coming from abroad to work in tech or finance and have average salary of €127,000
Owen Reilly: "Given the increased regulation, the rent pressure zone regulations and high taxation, it is not surprising that small landlords are selling... It's likely that all new developments in 20 - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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DEAL: Flexible workspace provider Knotel accelerates Dublin expansion with two docklands deals
Knotel has signed leases for 816sqm at the Bloodstone Building on Sir John Rogerson’s Quay & 805sqm at Ashford House on Tara Street; understood agreed rents of close to €55 per sq ft and €50 per - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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DEAL: SeaPoint Capital pays €7.2m for Grove Court portfolio of 30 units adjacent to Blanchardstown Centre
UK-headquartered SeaPoint Capital, has paid €7.2 million for a portfolio of 30 apartments at the Grove Court development in Blanchardstown, Dublin 15.
The price paid is slightly more than the € - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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DEAL: Quanta Capital buys high-profile No 43/44 O’Connell Street for €5m
Bernadine Hogan acted for the vendor, Irish Life. Developed in 1926, the building is a mid-terrace, five-storey over-basement property noted for its “Portland stone” facade and extending to 948.3s - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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DEAL: Orange Capital Partners acquires prime Dublin rental portfolio of refurbished Georgian buildings for €75m
OCP made its first investment in the Irish market in 2018 acquiring the Belgrave Collection, comprising 30 buildings from Larea Fa, a joint venture between Lugus Capital & Broadhaven Capital Partners, - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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Housebuilder Glenveagh to build 2,650 more homes than planned
Glenveagh Properties will build 2,650 more homes than it had originally expected between 2022 and 2024, the company said in a trading update on Wednesday.
The Dublin-listed housebuilder increased i - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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Banking & Payments Federation Ireland: First-time buyers drive growth in mortgage values and volumes
Some 12,259 new mortgages to the value of €2.8 billion were drawn down by borrowers. That represented an increase of 1.2 per cent in volume and 5 per cent in value on the corresponding quarter of 20 - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
29 Jan '20 |
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DEAL: Marlet snaps up 1.8 acre Sandyford site for €17m
Pat Crean’s Marlet Property Group has stepped in to acquire a prime 1.8 acre development site in Sandyford, south Dublin, for about €17 million following the withdrawal by a rival bidder of an off - Subscribe |
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© The Property Week |
28 Jan '20 |
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DNG: Affordability gap remains too wide despite house price inflation levelling out
The DNG Annual Residential Market Review for 2019 and Outlook 2020, released today, highlights the sharp slowdown in the rate of house price growth across the country, with residential property prices - Subscribe |
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© The Property Week |
28 Jan '20 |
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Huge opportunity in Ireland's healthcare sector
CBRE Ireland have released analysis on the healthcare sector in Ireland, which is timely considering the focus on health in the General Election 2020 campaign. According to CBRE, as the Irish populati - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
28 Jan '20 |
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Frank McDonald: Housing policy a litany of failure
As things stand, it is impossible for developers to build apartments for sale in Dublin for less than €400,000 and still make a profit – VAT, at 13.5 per cent, is levied on the sale price, plus st - Subscribe |
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© Business Post |
27 Jan '20 |
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[NEEDS BP SUB] More than 200 express interest in buying €1.25m-plus homes on new street in Ranelagh
The Red Cow group’s Michael Moran is responsible for the development of 20 houses in the leafy south Dublin suburb - Subscribe |
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© Irish Examiner |
27 Jan '20 |
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Harcourt posts profit of €23m and reduces debt
Pat Doherty’s Harcourt Developments have sold sites in Las Vegas for $14m (€12.6m) and in Latvia for €2m to help reduce the group’s €630.4m debt.
Accounts by the group’s Marzocco Unlimi - Subscribe |
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© Irish Examiner |
27 Jan '20 |
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Nick Charalambous of Alpha Wealth: Boom-bust property cycle is a certainty
Each of us, on average, is worth about €150,000, and about half of this is in housing. We have to rely on the value of those assets to see us through the ups and downs of life and property tends to - Subscribe |
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© Irish Examiner |
27 Jan '20 |
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UK property firm secures planning permission to build hostel on Cork''s Grand Parade
Cork City Council has given the go-ahead to Westhill, through an Irish subsidiary Bluescape Limited, to redevelop the former tourist office at 40-42 Grand Parade. - Subscribe |
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© Irish Examiner |
27 Jan '20 |
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Kyran Fitzgerald: Housing cure needs careful consideration of all options, not a knee-jerk reaction
It is worth asking if the debate on future home provision is not dominated — to an excessive degree — by a generation of builders who have not been particularly open to innovation, quality, or cos - Subscribe |
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© Irish Independent |
27 Jan '20 |
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Synge & Byrne cafe chain eyes Republic expansion
THE owners of Northern Ireland cafe business Synge & Byrne are scouting for the chain's first location in the Republic as they seek to Brexit-proof their firm.
Director and co-owner Adrian Garvey s - Subscribe |
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© The Irish Times |
24 Jan '20 |
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John FitzGerald: Election proposals may make the housing crisis worse
r
Research across many countries by the left-leaning German Institute for Economic Research shows that rent controls significantly reduce the supply of rental accommodation. Faced with restricted ren - Subscribe |
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© Irish Examiner |
24 Jan '20 |
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Construction industry say 2027 Cork motorway target is unacceptable
In its election manifesto for the Cork region, the CIF outlined a range of infrastructure projects it says are needed and said it is vital that commencement dates and project timescales are given for - Subscribe |
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© Irish Independent |
24 Jan '20 |
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Dublin 'must double homes built as population explodes'
Dublin needs at least 14,000 new homes annually - double the current rate of construction - to help house an expected extra 400,000 residents in the coming decade, according to Dublin Chamber.
The - Subscribe |
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