ittakestwo wrote: » I did give you an example... prices today in Japan are c. 40% below what they were in 1990
cnocbui wrote: » Oh, I don't know, how about the Farm bordering DCU and some of those large green bits on the right? I'd mention the massive swathes of golf courses but people got upset last time. Sacred cows or something.
awec wrote: » Indeed they are, and the fact is that the market has not yet crashed, and if anyone listened to you a month ago they'd have been premature. A costly enough mistake. Not a problem in itself, hardly anyone is always right in this game, it just gets frustrating when people like to act like they are the font of all knowledge.
smurgen wrote: » An interesting factor is the drop that will happen in commercial property. In the last few years companies have been firing up fancy offices,driving up labor costs. I think the combination of WFH being actively perfected By companies plus inevitable cost cutting coming down the line companies will be putting expensive real estate on hold. The impact will be more builders for the residential market. I expect the upheaval in the universities to have to same effect. Can't see much more expensive student accommodation going ahead with a sharp drop of foreign students expected next year. All in all I hope this will drive down residential housing costs.
GreeBo wrote: » For houses? Where are you seeing this?
There is no shortage of land for development in County Dublin which has an area of 921 km² compared with the island of Singapore with an area of 721 km² and a population of 5.7m. The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has estimated that farmland in 2010 accounted for 380 km² in County Dublin or 41% of the total area.
Article 43 of the Irish Constitution expressly states that the right to private property is "to be regulated by the principles of social justice" and to be reconciled "with the exigencies of the common good."The NAMA Act of 2009 introduced a windfall rate of 80% on rezoned land. However, this charge was abolished and profits from rezoned land from January 2015 are taxed at a capital gains rate of 33%.
The IFA succeeded in getting 23% of the €18bn budget, for land acquisition, compared with a ratio of 1% in Norway and 10% in Denmark, according to the National Roads Authority
"Denmark has not just got cheaper housing: according to the Dallas Fed’s data, the real house price has increased by a factor of 1.6 in Denmark compared to 3.4 in the UK since 1975 but new houses in Denmark are a lot bigger: 80% bigger in fact."The average size of an Irish house is the smallest in Western Europe despite having one of the lowest population densities on habitable land, in the European Union
GreeBo wrote: » Ok, so how many houses are you going to get there after you have added infrastructure and left the required green spaces? It's not the tens of thousands we need.It would be nonsense to mention golf courses, why not their in the Aviva and public parks while you are at it?
Ush1 wrote: » People should be concerned with more density in the city centre, not on fields in Castleknock.
snotboogie wrote: » How many people get to enjoy a match or concert at the Aviva or visit Phoenix Park compared to the number of people who get to enjoy a golf course? Golf courses are far more inefficient uses of urban land than parks or stadiums.
Villa05 wrote: » Below is an article that summarises our inefficient use of land. how vested interests dominate it and how current Government are a major part of the problemThe Irish land racket and Dublin housing crisis
pearcider wrote: » What if the random punter is armed with facts?
GreeBo wrote: » How often is the aviva used compared to a busy golf course? I can't believe Im actually replying to this nonsense.
snotboogie wrote: » The Aviva has a capacity of 52k, what is the capacity of a busy golf course? Are you seriously suggesting that more people would use a busy golf course in a year than would attend the Aviva?
JimmyVik wrote: » How rich are you?
GreeBo wrote: » Are you seriously suggesting that any houses built on a golf course would be affordable? The whole idea is nonsense and just needs to stop being brought up. We need high density homes in the city, we dont need them in the suburbs, which is where the golf courses are. In any case, the question was where would you build new *houses* in the Dublin to solve the housing issue. A farm beside DCU isnt going to return too many new houses.
Donald Trump wrote: » Developers already own vast swathes of undeveloped land. What is being proposed is effectively a land grab so that the same wealthy developers (or powerful corporations - Thomas Reid's case anyone?) can seize land and continue to sit on it and develop it later at their leisure. Before they go seizing more land they need to start enforcing vacant site taxes on land currently sitting idle.
Hubertj wrote: » This will be interesting. I find it difficult to understand how many shared offices spaces are sustainable in Dublin. They seem to be everywhere. Are they cheaper than standard offices or is it just the flexible terms that are attractive? Could some businesses switch to shared working spaces as it allows them to downsize and upsize. A number of factors to consider..
fliball123 wrote: » Hows about we go into your bank account and rob any excess money you have or if you have 2 cars we will repossess one and sell it and use the profits for the greater good..We are not a communist country going down the road your talking about would cause havoc. Why would you bother getting up and working in the morning if you know that billy across the way can sit on his hole all day and get the same as you..Be careful what you wish for comrade
Donald Trump wrote: » Are directing that at me "comrade"? I am not sure what your point is? Whether it is also against the idea of agricultural land seizure or against the idea of vacant site levies. I only suggested a vacant site levy which is a very reasonable mechanism. Development land should be a use-it-or-lose-it scenario. We are not in the viking times - the reason for a particular site being more valuable is not because it is near a good place to tie up the longships. It is because other development were either allowed or encouraged adjacent or close to it.
Hubertj wrote: » I'd be fairly certain if this punter was "rich" he wouldn't be spending his time on boards. Easy to say what should be done with other peoples money....