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M1 Podcast
Garrett Mullan
25 episodes
8 months ago
The M1 Podcast carries stories and features of interest to those living and travelling up and down and in and around the M1 motorway in Ireland. It carries stories of local and regional interest with different themes including politics, culture, sport, lifestyle, media, business and more.
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All content for M1 Podcast is the property of Garrett Mullan and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The M1 Podcast carries stories and features of interest to those living and travelling up and down and in and around the M1 motorway in Ireland. It carries stories of local and regional interest with different themes including politics, culture, sport, lifestyle, media, business and more.
Show more...
Personal Journals
Arts,
Society & Culture
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Episode 16- Is this Meath based modular house builder the key to resolving our housing crisis?
M1 Podcast
45 minutes 18 seconds
1 year ago
Episode 16- Is this Meath based modular house builder the key to resolving our housing crisis?

Last month, Dublin City Council listed new houses as affordable at €475,000 on Oscar Traynor Road. The ‘market’ price is even higher. This is a discounted price, which is meant to be affordable, but €475,000 is not affordable for most of us.







There is another housing scheme introduced in 2020 which seeks to address the crisis in affordability. The ‘cost rental’ housing which is increasing since that time find its inspiration from the so called ‘Vienna’ model. That is, housing rented out at no profit. The rent pays for the cost of the house and maintenance.



When activists were advocating this game changing solution in the period 2015-2020, they envisioned if introduced at scale, rents would become affordable at say €700-800 per unit. By the time the scheme was introduced, its first units were renting out at €1200 per month on the southside of Dublin for 2 bed houses and the first cost rented units at €1200 in Balbriggan for 3 bed houses.



Cost rental housing is administered through Approved Housing Bodies and others including the Land Development Agency. If we had cost rental housing over decades, the model would have served us, as a state, very well because housing rent would not only pay for itself but would also generate income at the end of loan terms.



In terms of sustainability, it is a preferred method to social housing rent, which is housing that is rented based on the household income. In Dublin City Council, this is 15% and in Fingal this is 12% of net income. There are people in older social housing developments who say the rent they have paid has more than paid for their housing. This is true, if they have been renting since the 1970s, when the average house price was less than €10,000.



Today though, houses and apartments are being acquired by AHBs and local councils at a cost of €400,000 and €500,000 each. They are then rented out at social housing rents (15% and 12% in the case of Dublin City and Fingal) which is at an average of €280 per month. Of course, it is vital that social housing is provided at an increased level because we are in a situation where we have 14,000 or more homeless.



Cost rental housing has not unfortunately delivered affordable rents to the ‘squeezed middle’. The cost rents have risen significantly since 2020 because the cost of buying houses has increased significantly. Recent cost rents advertised in Fingal list 3 bed houses renting out at €1600 and €1700 a month. This is more than most recent mortgages.



So affordable houses are listed at €475,000 and affordable rents are €1700 a month and we have more people in housing need than ever before, what policy is going to address the situation of a crisis in housing affordability.



Last year, it was announced the government has commenced the construction of up to 2,000 modular housing units at a cost of €145,000 each. They were built to provide accommodation for Ukrainian refugees. First look inside Cork’s modular homes as Mahon prepares to welcome Ukrainian families (irishexaminer.com)



People may remember modular housing was presented as a solution as far back as 2014, after the death of homeless man Jonathan Corrie. It was presented as a rapid build low cost solution to a growing crisis in housing and homelessness. One year on from Jonathan Corrie’s death, we’re still relying on short-term solutions (thejournal.ie) Dublin may be getting five modul...
M1 Podcast
The M1 Podcast carries stories and features of interest to those living and travelling up and down and in and around the M1 motorway in Ireland. It carries stories of local and regional interest with different themes including politics, culture, sport, lifestyle, media, business and more.