All Ireland supplement articles – Page 2
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Insight
Ireland supplement: two decades on from Good Friday Agreement
The Good Friday Agreement was signed two decades ago and what a 20 years it has been since. The end of ‘the Troubles’ meant Northern Ireland’s property market was suddenly open for business, prompting a flurry of deals and development.
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Markets
Dublin’s new dawn: office market growth in the Irish capital
The global financial crash hit the Dublin office market hard. A decade on, the market has fully recovered, but is the outlook still positive?
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Markets
Room at the Inn: Premier Inn's Republic of Ireland expansion
As part of an international rollout, Premier Inn is expanding into the Republic of Ireland. Mia Hunt reports on the company’s growth plans and asks what the chain will add to the Irish hotels market
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Markets
Escape to the County: Kilkenny Abbey Quarter Development
With demand for office space in Dublin far outstripping supply, could a soon-to-be-built mixed-use development in County Kilkenny could tempt occupiers out of the capital?
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Insight
Belfast sees record office take-up
The market has defied political uncertainty surrounding Brexit and the breakdown of the Northern Ireland Executive.
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Insight
Getting personal: Bywater Properties interview
Bywater Properties’ Theo Michell and Patrick O’Gorman explain how their connections with Belfast were key to their decision to embark on a major mixed-use scheme in the city.
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Insight
Five minutes with: Mark Reynolds (Savills Ireland)
Savills Ireland’s director of development and consultancy on fatherhood, graveyards and ice cream.
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Insight
Solid year for Irish investment
A strong economy and rising rents helped prop up overall activity in a year marked by fewer blockbuster deals.
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Insight
Trump tax reform: Trumped?
What impact could Donald Trump’s attempts to lure US firms back to their home turf have on Ireland’s commercial property market?
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Insight
Ireland supplement: Ireland's economy, population and office markets on the up
There is little that has caused Irish property developers more consternation than the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA).
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Insight
NAMA: the bad bank theory
Disgruntled developers blame Irish bailout vehicle NAMA for losing them millions; others believe it has been the economy’s saviour. Property Week weighs up the arguments.
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Insight
Project Ireland 2040: numbers game
With Ireland’s population soaring, Property Week assesses what the government is doing to ensure housing and infrastructure keep up.
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Insight
Flexible workspace: the perfect space
Thanks to a thriving start-up culture and growing demand from established corporates, flexible workspace is a strong emerging sector in the Dublin office market.
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Insight
Limerick and Belfast development profiles: a tale of two cities
Two major, mixed-use developments are about to get under way – one in Belfast, Northern Ireland, the other in Limerick, in the Republic. Property Week finds out more about the plans for these key schemes.
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Insight
Belfast joins BTR party
The first purpose-built rental schemes are emerging in the city centre as the size of the young professional population swells and rents tick up.
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Insight
Filling in the gaps: Popertee interview
Lucinda Kelly saw a chance to unite proptech and pop-ups. Her firm, Popertee, is thriving, and she’s resolved to keep it rooted in Ireland.
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Insight
Five minutes with: John Vaudin
Director at WK Nowlan Real Estate Advisors on spilt whiskey, the housing crisis and good curries
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Insight
Ireland Docklands regeneration: on the waterfront
Ireland is renowned for its beautiful waterfronts, but there are two notable regeneration opportunities that have yet to be tapped: the docklands of Cork and Galway.
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Insight
Limerick's regeneration: writing a new Limerick
Schemes abandoned in the wake of the financial crisis are finally getting off the ground in Limerick thanks to the council’s intervention.
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Insight
The future looks green for Ireland
Ireland has the fastest-growing economy in Europe. After the financial crash of 2011, you could say the only way was up. But who could have expected the economy to bounce back to the extent that it has?
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