DubLad69 wrote: » We were chatting to the estate agent, who mentioned in passing that about half of those purchasing in the development were not born in Ireland. All from Eastern Europe and India (no English, Western Europeans, or Africans at all which seems strange) I've already met my future Indian neighbours who seem so nice.
DubLad69 wrote: » Does the high immigrant populations in these areas somehow create some kind of issue? Or is it pure coincidence?
Caranica wrote: » That estate agent sounds very very unprofessional. They should not be disclosing any information about the identities of purchasers. Also some may be investors. I'd be looking at reporting the EA rather than worrying about stereotypes and generalisations about people who are ultimately paying a six figure sum, the same as you.
DubLad69 wrote: » Hi all, I am in the process of buying a house in a new development in Dublin. It is in a pretty standard middle class area. We were chatting to the estate agent, who mentioned in passing that about half of those purchasing in the development were not born in Ireland. All from Eastern Europe and India (no English, Western Europeans, or Africans at all which seems strange) I've already met my future Indian neighbours who seem so nice. It got me thinking though, the only two other areas that I know of that have high immigrant population are Tyrrelstown/Blanchardstown and Adamstown. Neither of which I would consider particularly nice areas. Does the high immigrant populations in these areas somehow create some kind of issue? Or is it pure coincidence? I'm not talking about living next door to immigrants or anything like that, more so that they might not have good social connections etc
breezy1985 wrote: » Blanchardstown was a dump long before we ever han an immigrant. Immigrants don't make an area s**t it's already that way so the usually poor immigrants move there.
Hamachi wrote: » You’ve clearly never lived in Blanchardstown. The older parts near the village like Roselawn are lovely and quite desirable. Some of the newer developments, built in the last two decades, less so. OP, if your future immigrant neighbors are gainfully employed, you’ll likely have few issues. The only downside is that you may have little or nothing in common with them. I live in one of those hyper diverse areas you’ve mentioned above. The Irish neighbors tend to know each other and mix quite a bit. The immigrants tend to gravitate towards others of their own ethnicity. I’m actually back in my own hometown of ~8K people this week for family reasons. It’s lovely to stroll around chatting to the neighbors and saying hello to strangers when out for a jog. That aspect is very much missing in my diverse West Dublin neighborhood.
breezy1985 wrote: » Depends on what you are looking for I suppose. I find the level of nosiness and the sense of ownership people seem to think they have over you in a typical Irish 8k town to be the worst possible type of neighbour.
catrionanic wrote: » Maybe a problem if you're a racist. Honestly, the ethnic background of the locals would never even cross my mind when buying a house.
Hamachi wrote: » You’ve clearly never lived in Blanchardstown. The older parts near the village like Roselawn are lovely and quite desirable. Some of the newer developments, built in the last two decades, less so.
Caranica wrote: » I've lived in one of those newer developments for 17 years and it's lovely and quite desirable. With one exception, properties tend to sell in days rather than weeks or months. The nationality of owners has zero relevance.
DubLad69 wrote: » Hi all, Does the high immigrant populations in these areas somehow create some kind of issue? Or is it pure coincidence?
bubblypop wrote: » It really is shocking to think that people would worry about the nationalities of the persons buying houses in the same estate. Cannot understand why this could be a problem
Hamachi wrote: » What’s your take on the estate agent sharing this information with the OP? Do you think it was a benign slip of the tongue? Or is it something, that in his professional experience, homebuyers tend to query?