All Property Week articles in Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

View all stories from this issue.

  • Motoring: Treasury's M1 Business Park has already been successful in attracting tenants
    Markets

    Tunnel vision

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    An access tunnel to the port and a new motorway have put two of Dublin’s business parks in prime position to attract tenants.

  • Brendan Mullan
    Markets

    Planners in the works

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    A strike by Belfast’s planning department has thrown developers big and small into turmoil.

  • Gold miners: AIB's John Wilkinson (far left) and Daragh Clarke have played their part in the Irish deals that have been a recurrent feature in Property Week
    Markets

    The Irish Stampede

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    With punitive Stamp Duty and few large properties at home, Irish investors are set to top the ¤2.5bn they invested in UK property last year.

  • News

    Ireland

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

  • Markets

    Libeskind makes grand irish entrance

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    Architect Daniel Libeskind has provoked such controversy with his proposals for the buildings that will replace the World Trade Center in New York, that few have noticed his debut in Dublin.

  • Out of sync: the proposed extension to Sprucefield will incorporate Ireland's first John Lewis. But dissenters fear it will hit trade in the city centre
    Markets

    Extension discord

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    If developer Stannifer gets the green light for an extension to its Sprucefield retail park near Belfast, it will pave the way for the first John Lewis store in Ireland. But there are concerns it will hit city trade.

  • Popular culture: Cork is preparing to become the  European Capital of Culture next year
    Markets

    Champagne Cork

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    As 2005 nears, Cork is gearing up for its year in the limelight as European Capital of Culture – and the property world is playing its part

  • Custom base: there may not be a conference centre as yet but Dubliners can console themselves with new shopping centres, such as CHQ
    Markets

    Conference call

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    Ireland’s long wait for an international conference centre could soon be over now that three developers have been shortlisted

  • Markets

    Victoria set to give Belfasts shoppers a Square deal

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    The wind of political change in Northern Ireland, after its recent history of conflict, has brought with it an opportunity, almost unique in a 21st-century developed European country, to build something new and exciting.

  • Markets

    Belfast goes crazy for coffee

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    Shoppers in the busy pedestrianised prime shopping area of Belfast had even heavier crowds to deal with last month.

  • Markets

    All for one and one for all

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    A delighted shopper (left) picks up a Ralph Lauren shirt at the opening of Junction One, Northern Ireland’s first factory outlet.

  • Baskets drawn: Tesco, Marks & Spencer, Spar and Musgrave (through its SuperValu and Centra brands) are all upping the ante in the convenience store war
    Markets

    Aisles at war

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    Ireland’s restrictive planning laws are forcing supermarkets to scale back their floorspace and target the smaller convenience store market

  • Markets

    Bastion of 1960s architecture prepares to meet its maker

    Ireland Supplement 3 September 2004

    Talk of ‘the good bomb’ or ‘the friendly bomb’ is beginning to be heard all around Belfast.