2008 global crash w an added property speculation bubble (largely driven by FF policy) which bursts in Ireland.
Country goes bankrupt, land ends up in NAMA.
Under FG/ Labour gov to follow much of this land is flogged off to get it off the balance books.
2/22
Much of this land ends up in the hands of speculators & vulture funds brought in by FG while part of a FG/ Lab coalition.
2015 Minister of Environment @alankellylabour brings in Section 28(c) of the Planning Act which allows the Minister to make diktats over housing policy.
3/22
Alan Kelly brings in new apartment guidelines reducing standards from 2007 & we have our first mention of “build-to-let housing for mobile workers” (wonder where he got that language).
Kelly soon succeeded by @simoncoveney who brings in Strategic Housing Developments (SHDs)
4/22
This allows large scale developments of 100+ units to bypass local authorities & go straight to An Bord Pleanála. (The head of ABP’s SHD division since 2017 is a close personal friend of Coveney). 100 units becomes target for new developments incl on many unsuitable sites.
5/22
Coveney succeeded by wunderkind @MurphyEoghan who reduces design standards for new apartments in 2018 & brings in “new & exciting” forms of housing such as “co-living” & “build-to-rent” for “young & increasingly internationally mobile workers (sounds familiar doesn’t it?)
6/22
Murphy also had the bright idea to remove local authority power over building heights against the recommendation of his own Department.
Betting on high rise induces land speculation & ensures sites are only viable for the largest builders, stalling development.
7/22
Murphy’s successor @DarraghOBrienTD axes co-living but not before letting a flood of applications through. His reasoning is the lower standards & higher ROI for co-living makes other development types less unviable - yet the Minister fails to see parallels w build-to-rent.
8/22
We effectively have a housing system that has been rigged to the benefit of the largest institutional players. Housing standards have been shot in the name of “cost-saving” while meddling w standards has induced massive speculation wiping out affordability.
9/22
Largely overseas based institutional funds are betting on high returns from the Irish property market, where >82% of residential schemes applied for in Dublin in 2020 were for lucrative build-to-rent.
10/22
These funds including REITS are private entities and much like our largest developers they have a duty first and foremost to their shareholders to maximise and sustain returns.
Yet we’re led to believe supply & demand will *eventually* induce affordability.
11/22
Understanding the failed policy that brought us here is key to forming an alternative housing policy.
That alternative housing policy should be focused on generating affordability while maintaining high standards for new homes & communities.
12/22
Institutional investors are essentially plugging an issue w development financing but offer v poor value for money & demand concessions over housing standards.
The state should step into this role to ensure the form of new homes & communities is not dictated by financing.
13/22
The state could set up a sovereign wealth fund which acts as a publicly owned REIT so private rental income stays in the economy.
Housing standards can be restored & concessions for “build-to-rent” demanded by institutional property can get in the bin.
14/22
Simultaneously, we need to address the fallacy of “filtering” or trickle down housing, which will fail to deliver affordability due to the housing absorption rate which means developers will not build so much, so quick, as to make their return of investment fall.
15/22
Unlike REITs & private developers the state’s first duty is to the common good, not shareholders & is thus best placed to increase housing delivery beyond the absorption rate, similar to Singapore’s Housing Development Board which delivers affordable housing for purchase.
16/22
The state could buy out one of the larger housing developers & create a state construction company - as suggested by @RoryHearne
This would ensure we have a consistent rate of housing output to break the property bubble cycle & mitigate against procurement inflation.
17/22
Centralising power to the Housing Ministry from local authorities through SPPRs & SHDs has created uncertainty & speculation, directly led to the increase to Judicial Reviews.
There’s much talk of a “plan led approach” to housing & that should be led by local authorities.
18/22
This will involve a shift in power and increase in resource incl additional planners, conservation officers & enforcement officers as well as one-stop shops in every local authority to enable large-scale “over the shop” developments & bring back derelict properties.
19/22
Engaging w dereliction & vacancy meaningfully means disciplining the land market. Land speculation & land flipping adds up to €100k to housing costs. Cost savings here have the least disruptive societal impact in new housing delivery.
20/22
Disciplining the land market means an effective Site Value Tax, discouraging speculation by limiting planning permission durations & introducing specific zoning for affordable housing (ala Kenny report 1979) which ensures no re-zoning windfalls that decrease affordability.
21/22
I don’t claim to have all the answers on housing policy, but have done enough research w @otrosnosotros to understand current policy failures which is essential to charting a new course.
*State of play in Irish planning corruption & cronyism*
Since 2015 power over planning decisions has been stripped from local authorities & handed to An Bord Pleanála which has been stuffed w political appointees such as personal friend of @simoncoveney Paul Hyde
Recently @wereontheditch has broken a number of stories about Hyde’s cronyism such as failure to declare conflicts of interest when deciding on decisions involving his brother’s company, lands adjacent his father’s & even on his brother’s house!
In many cases Hyde went against the recommendations of ABP’s own planning inspectors.
Just last November Hyde also granted permission for US developer Hines’ 1,614 build-to-rent neighbourhood in Drumcondra against the recommendation of Dublin City Council.
Excited to talk about housing policy at Ireland’s Edge later this month.
The timing of this tweet seems appropriate considering An Bord Pleanála today published their decision to Grant Permission to Hines’ build-to-rent dystopia at Holy Cross College in Drumcondra…
I do not believe a corporation should own an entire neighbourhood, or dictate housing policy. It is not in a community’s interest for the homes of 4,000 people to be under a single landlord. It is not in the national interest for that landlord & their profits to be overseas.
2/
Build-to-rent, like co-living is a product of the financialization of housing. Homes reinvented as investment assets for institutional funds.
The previous gov were lobbied to re-write housing policy to suit funds & dutifully reduced liveability standards for their profits.
3/
A thread about build-to-rent (btr), aparthotels & how the government has rewritten housing policy for the mythical “mobile worker”, at the behest of lobbyists, and the effects of this on housing supply…
1/14
The Irish government’s Design Standards for New Apartments were updated in 2015 for the first time since 2007, just a few years after the vultures were invited in. The changes included the concept of “Centrally managed and operated ‘build to let’ housing for mobile workers”
2/14
By 2018, numerous large scale apartment schemes designed to the new standards were in planning. However, incessant lobbying by investment funds continued for reduction in standards & a receptive FG housing Minister Eoghan Murphy meant change was coming once again…