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[Article] Students urged to start house hunt

  • 06-08-2008 4:00pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 78,647 ✭✭✭✭


    http://www.rte.ie/news/2008/0806/students.html
    Students urged to start house hunt

    Third level students in Dublin are already being urged to find a place to live for the upcoming academic year as soon as possible.

    Leaving Certificate results are not being released until next week.

    However, the Union of Students in Ireland say 90% of rentable student properties in the city will be gone by the end of this month.

    It is warning that students risk being forced into staying in B&Bs unless they start searching for accommodation soon.

    21-year-old Isolde Moylan from Clonmel, Co Tipperary, who is studying at Trinity College, says every year it is a struggle to find accommodation for the college term.

    'Last year I looked for eight weeks, couldn't find anything. I even contemplated getting a place with no windows - it was €550 a month,' she said.

    Ms Moylan said that many people would pay €500-550 to rent in Dublin city centre, or around €450 for a shared room.

    'This year a lot of my friends were rejected from campus accommodation, as was I, so that made it even more difficult, because in fourth year you're kind of banking on getting on campus.'


    Students need to be 'on the ball' - USI

    She urged students to start looking early. 'Once September hits, everyone gets back from America or wherever they were on holidays and everyone starts looking, it's so hard to find a place.

    'And also a lot of places don't take students - they'll only accept professionals so if you find a place now you just take it, and you pay the extra couple of months' rent.'

    USI President Shane Kelly said some problematic accommodation remains around the city. 'We hear from students who are trying to rent in places where they have an outside toilet or a toilet shared between 15 apartments.'

    But he said that while such situations still existed, they were only experienced in a minority of cases.

    He said students were already on the look for places for next year, and added that the search would intensify after the Leaving Certificate results are issued.

    'So really people need to be on the ball now if they're trying to find a decent accommodation close to where they're thinking of studying,' he said.

    Naoise McNally of property website Daft.ie says there is approximately double the amount of rented property on the market compared to last year.

    She said that this should make it easier for students to find a property, and added that rents were falling.

    'They're not dropping by huge amounts in nominal terms - we're talking about 2% across the board - but it does vary significantly from region to region and from area to area in the city.'

    The USI said that while there were more properties on the market, demand for rental housing had also increased.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,808 ✭✭✭Ste.phen


    So on one hand there's the USI getting their name out, and on the other there's daft reminding us all that there's no shortage of rental properties in Ireland...
    Nothing to see here, move along!


This discussion has been closed.
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