smurgen wrote: » Capitalism is changed now indefinitely.
The_Conductor wrote: » As short term accommodation solutions- often while residents (who aren't tenants) are seeking alternate more long term accommodation that better suits their needs. In a lot of cases it also caters to a transient workforce who don't know how long they may be working in a particular location and do not wish to put down roots. Certainly, it has a place in the accommodation mix- but it shouldn't be sold as something it patently is not- and it also should be appropriately priced- cognisant of the fact that the residents do not have the rights that a tenant would have.
PropQueries wrote: » In the Sunday Business Post today, a student accommodation provider down near the Three Arena in Dublin is seeking planning permission to rent 599 bed spaces to non students. That's the equivalent of 300 two-bed apartments entering the regular residential market that would normally take up to 24 months to build. The article link is here: https://www.businesspost.ie/residential/plan-to-lease-student-digs-to-others-is-slated-as-co-living-by-the-back-door-b14628f6
JamesMason wrote: » Yes frankly. Care to put a time frame on the gap between the development of a safe vaccine, and when the general public can be vaccinated en masse? What are the struggling businesses supposed to do in the meantime? What effect will that have on apartment prices in say, city centres, for example?
Hubertj wrote: » Yes my brother used it short term when he first move to Amsterdam. Have developers here stated it’s intended for long term?
JJJackal wrote: » Do you think this will go straight through planning?
Cyrus wrote: Capitalism is what will get us out of this and it will be alive and well .
Cyrus wrote: » It’s exactly what you said and it’s what you are saying again the majority of business are done . Trust me your posts aren’t that insightful but that they need to be read more than once
Iceman29 wrote: » So you're telling me what I'm saying now are ya??? Hahaha you're unreal. I hope you'll be still posting in a years time so I can have a bigger laugh at you then. For 5 mins you should maybe take your head out of your.....
Cyrus wrote: » Capitalism is what will get us out of this and it will be alive and well .
smurgen wrote: » Ya? So no bailouts so? It's funny I thought the Fed and the ECB were having to give stimulus. Unless they're private ventures now aswell. And if a publically funded university finds the vaccine that'll be capitalism too right?
PropQueries wrote: » I'm not sure. But I can't see the Government being allowed to sit back if on one side there are homeless families and then on the other side there are thousands of empty bed spaces in these blocks all around Dublin City. Many of the bed spaces in these units were already empty pre-covid, so I think a significant proportion of these were always going to enter the normal residential market at some point. The current pandemic is just speeding up the process.
JJJackal wrote: » I cant see a trend of student accommodation being converted to co-living etc being allowed
Wanderer78 wrote: » Completely agree, but it certainly won't be our current forum of it, I.e. free market libertarianism
PropQueries wrote: That's the equivalent of 300 two-bed apartments entering the regular residential market that would normally take up to 24 months to build.
PropQueries wrote: » Maybe. But each unit is the equivalent of a 6 bedroom family apartment. So, if there is demand for what are effectively 6 bedroom family apartments and the developers also want to see them in the market as such, the only obstruction is the Government. Maybe the state will allow thousands of potential family homes to remain vacant for at least the next twelve months, but it seems like an easy win for everyone involved i.e. the developers get their rental income and the state makes a significant dent in or finally eliminates the number of homeless families in the capital.
Villa05 wrote: » I'd be shocked if these are for regular resedential given their location near the point, Aviva and Luas link to IFSC and beyond. These will be converted to short term let for transient workers and concert/sporting events. Far more financially lucrative than students, resedential letting
Hubertj wrote: Why do the SF muppets dislike co living developments so much? They work great in other countries.
Hubertj wrote: Yes my brother used it short term when he first move to Amsterdam. Have developers here stated it’s intended for long term?
Ozark707 wrote: » I am not sure of how many families on the housing list require a 6 bed apt. I would have thought this will be aimed at younger people. If the developers think they can rent these at the current rates they look from students they could be vacant for quite a while longer...
PropQueries wrote: I don't think they would get planning permission for a change of use to short-term letting. That would basically make them a hotel and I'm sure the hotels around them would object.
Villa05 wrote: » Change to residential and then milk it for everything you can get out of it as has been the case with resedential property in strategic locations. There are quiet a number of posters on here that are openly discussing short term letting of resedential property Ref concerts and sporting events will return eventually and most are held during the academic year hence the need to get rid of the students
Ozark707 wrote: » A room in one of these 6 beds was ~240pw...so over 6k a month per unit. There is not a hope in hell that they will be able to obtain that in the normal market so I think they will want to go back to students ASAP. I would have my doubts as to whether the student market will come back as strong as before and there are a plethora of developments that were going to come on stream in the next 2-3 years. Either way this will alleviate pressure. Maybe it can help with DP as the new government have stated that they want to see an end to it.
PropQueries wrote: » My understanding is that they weren't able to fully rent them even pre-covid. The €240 per week was only achievable prior to the extra thousands that have entered the market in the past 2 years alone. The student prices were going to drop very soon in either case, so signing an e.g. 25 year lease with the council would seem like a logical business decision in their case, which is what I assume they may eventually look to do.
Ozark707 wrote: » I didn't realise they were struggling to let them pre-Covid but that is unsurprising given the price they were looking for. Pointless having lots of (extra) vacant blocks in the cities given we still have a shortage of accommodation.
PropQueries wrote: » Looks like they all seem to be seeking some form of change of use. The Times last week reported: "...Global Student Accommodation (GSA)... has sought permission from Dublin council for temporary use of student accommodation at 25-29 Dominick Street Upper and 274 North Circular Road in Dublin 7 for tourist or visitor accommodation". Given that the 'tourist' thing isn't going to probably happen, I think people should concentrate on what they define as 'visitor' accommodation. The link is here: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/global-student-accommodation-seeks-to-bed-down-tourists-in-dublin-college-digs-fh7vqjxqt