Thormanby Road, which leads from Howth village up to the Summit, is one of D13's best addresses, but the housing stock, and therefore prices, vary hugely. Number nine, for example, a three-bed terraced property, 120sq m in size, boasting sea views and within the village boundary, sold for €515,000, according to the property price register in February, on an asking price of €545,000, through agent Youngs. Contrast that with Carnalea, formerly Rosbeg, a 488sq m detached property on 1.62 acres of land that sold off-market in December 2015 for €5 million, a price of €3.07 million an acre. Its new owner is hoping to get permission to build a superhouse, a two-storey-over-basement property of 882sq m that would span almost the full width of the site.
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Lindisfarne, number 44d, sits somewhere in the middle of these two price extremes and, at first glance, at an asking price of €1.8 million through agents Savills, appears to be a high value for a rather ordinary three-bedroom detached bungalow hidden from the road by a long driveway.
Standard-looking
Secreted behind a high hedge, the three-bedroom bungalow, while well-located, is pretty standard-looking – until you walk through it and out to the rear garden and realise that it boasts 1.06 acres of bucolic countryside. The L-shaped site is home to several rabbits in hutches, numerous chicken runs and a pair of stables that house two horses.
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It would be a wonderful place to grow up and for those with deep enough pockets they could upgrade the existing house and make that dream a reality.
But, being so close to the village, the Dart line and schools, its real value is most likely in its development potential, and at about €1.698 million an acre, it’s almost half the price of that paid for Carnalea, which faced south.
The current owner bought the property for €735,000 in 2011 and it first appeared on the Property Price Register in October 2012.
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Planning
Back then the property already had planning for three detached single-storey houses to the rear, having previously been amended from a permission granted to build four detached properties.
While the owner imprved the three-bedroom house, adding a lovely, bright, vault-ceilinged eat-in kitchen with glass gable wall, and upgraded the dual-aspect livingroom, would-be buyers will be scrutinising planning permission and the drone footage to get a better feel for the site and what views the single-storey structures will have across the Howth Special Amenity Areas buffer zone that abuts the land.
There is a decent-sized garden to the front that is south-facing and hidden from the road. Planning allows for the reconfiguration of the bungalow, demolishing part of it, including the garage, to create a through road to the houses to the rear. One wonders if the houses, when built, will have sea views and what priece they might command. For context, Cosgrave’s luxury new-build houses at Thormanby Hall, just up the street on the other side of the road, are asking from €1.475 million each.