Affordable housing: Dublin City Council bows to pressure with new lower prices at Oscar Traynor Woods

Three-bed house will go on offer for just under €361,000 at Coolock development with council taking a higher equity stake

Lower prices will be on offer for homes at Dublin City Council’s affordable housing estate at Oscar Traynor Road in Coolock
Lower prices will be on offer for homes at Dublin City Council’s affordable housing estate at Oscar Traynor Road in Coolock

Homes at Dublin City Council’s affordable housing estate at Oscar Traynor Road will be offered at lower prices following outcry over the high cost of houses and apartments in the State-subsidised scheme.

The council has come under pressure over the last two weeks after it advertised prices of up to €475,000 for a three-bed semidetached house in the scheme for eligible affordable housing purchasers with incomes of just over €106,000.

The costs were about €100,000 higher than expected when councillors signed off on the deal with developer Glenveagh in 2021 to build the homes on the council site in Coolock.

Prospective purchasers with lower incomes will now be able to buy the same three-bed house for as low as €360,931. However, the council will take a considerably higher equity stake, almost 28 per cent, in homes sold at this price.

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At an emergency meeting last Monday to discuss the council’s flagship affordable housing scheme, Dave Dinnigan, the council’s director of housing delivery, told councillors that Glenveagh was not getting “one more penny” despite the increased price of the homes.

The increase was caused by the rise in market values, which, according to the council’s valuers and an independent estate agent, put the Oscar Traynor Woods homes at €500,000 for the three-bed, at €450,000 for a two-bed and €325,000 for a one-bed. The affordability calculation, under the rules of the scheme, meant a buyer with an income of up to €106,875 could qualify, if they paid €475,000 and the council took a 5 per cent stake in the scheme.

At the lowest end of the income scale, someone earning approximately €90,000 would pay just under €400,000 for the three-bed house and the council would take about a 20 per cent stake.

Similar percentage reductions were applied for the one- and two-bedroom properties, with the homes costing one-beds costing €264,358 to €308,750, two-beds €355,760 to €427,500 and equity stakes from 5 to 21 per cent, depending on the buyers “purchasing power”.

For the two-beds, buyers could earn a minimum of €80,000 and a maximum of just over €96,000. The one-bed income eligibility ranged from about €60,000 to just under €70,000.

The 'affordable' homes costing twelve times the average wage

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With the council now willing to take a substantially larger share of equity, up to just under 28 per cent, buyers will be able to apply for a one-bed costing €254,358 if they have an income of €56,000, and a two-bed for €325,769 if they earn €72,000.

The council had planned to open the scheme to applications next week but told councillors on Friday that it would postpone this until July 30th.

Just 16 houses will then be available to buy out of a total of 172 affordable homes due to be built at Oscar Traynor Woods. A total of 835 homes are planned for the estate, with the remainder split equally between cost-rental and social housing. The first 16 homes are expected to be completed early next year and the entire estate is due for completion in 2027.

Olivia Kelly

Olivia Kelly

Olivia Kelly is Dublin Editor of The Irish Times