
Cairn Homes lodges plan for 252 apartments and houses in Blackrock that will made available for sale
Cairn Homes
is to lodge new plans for 252 residential build-to-sell units for one of the few available sites in Blackrock in south Dublin that is suitable for a higher density apartment scheme.
Cairn Homes is to seek permission for 236 apartments and 16 houses from Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council for its site at Chesterfield, Cross Avenue, Blackrock, Co Dublin.
The 236 apartments are to be located in two blocks ranging in height from five to eight storeys while the 16 homes will be five bedroom terrace houses.
Cairn has been trying to develop the site for the past seven years and last year
An Coimisiún Pleanála
refused permission for 355 build-to-rent apartments as it would lead to an over-proliferation of such apartments for the area.
READ MORE
ACP refused planning permission after James M Sheehan, co-founder of the Blackrock, Hermitage and Galway Clinics, claimed that the plan 'is grossly excessive'. This was one of more than30 objections were lodged against the scheme.
[
Cairn Homes refused permission for 280 new homes in south west Dublin
Opens in new window
]
Cairn previously secured planning permission for an apartment scheme on the site but this was quashed by the High Court in July 2019 following residents' opposition.
Addressing ACP's grounds for refusal on the proliferation of built-to-rent apartments for the area, planning consultants for the new scheme, McCutcheon Halley Chartered Planning Consultants (MHP) state that new scheme 'offers 252 built-to-sell units, which align with the identified housing needs in Dún Laoghaire Rathdown County Council'.
MHP states that the scheme would 'facilitate increased housing supply and choice along Cross Avenue and its environs, which is located 1km southwest of Blackrock Village'.
The developers are proposing a density of 100 units per hectare and MHP states that 'the proposed density and mix is considered suitable for the site ensuring a sufficient quantum of units is provided whilst also protecting the amenity of existing adjoining residential properties'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Gareth Sheridan plays down business partner's Moldovan airline controversy as ‘not an issue' for election
Presidential hopeful Gareth Sheridan has said he knows 'very little' about his business partner's involvement in a controversial airline privatisation deal in Moldova . Speaking at the formal launch of his presidential campaign in Dublin, Mr Sheridan said he had not spoken to his business partner Serguei Melnik, who has succeeded him as chief executive of his company Nutriband for the duration of the campaign, about his involvement in the Air Moldova deal and possible links to Russian oligarchs. Mr Sheridan said he knew 'very little about that situation' and added that it was 'not an issue' in terms of the focus of his campaign, housing. The 35-year-old said he was confident he had a proposer and seconder to secure nominations for Laois and Tipperary county councils and declined to name four others he also believed he could secure nominations from. READ MORE Mr Sheridan, who would be the youngest ever presidential candidate if he secures a nomination, has budgeted for a campaign fund of up to €500,000, although he hoped to do it for less from his own funds. He said his net worth was $16 million (€13.7m) based on the current value of his shares in his business Nutriband and he has $500,000 (€429,627) in cash holdings. His campaign is focused on housing, he added, and he wants to 'make Ireland home again', a phrase he denied had Trumpian connotations. He pointed to Article 45.2.1 of the Constitution which obliges the State to direct policy so that citizens 'may through their occupations find the means of making reasonable provision for their domestic needs'. Mr Sheridan said people should be able to afford to buy a home in Ireland, which they are not able to do. Gareth Sheridan with his wife Heidi after the briefing at the Shelbourne hotel. Photograph: Alan Betson/ The Irish Times Launching his campaign at the Shelbourne Hotel, with his wife Heidi in attendance, Mr Sheridan started his address by drawing attention to media coverage of him in the last number of days, which he described as 'a little off'. He addressed his relationship with Sean Gallagher , who twice put himself forward unsuccessfully in presidential elections, and was executive chairman of Nutriband for four years to 2022. [ Mairead McGuinness drops out of presidential race due to health reasons Opens in new window ] Mr Sheridan said that after the company was listed on the Nasdaq in the US, it was decided to replace Mr Gallagher with Serguei Melnik, who had more experience with capital markets. 'We asked [Mr Gallagher] to voluntarily step aside on the same remuneration,' he said. 'Communication broke down at the next shareholder meeting' and Mr Melnik was voted in to replace Mr Gallagher. Mr Gallagher then resigned from the Nutriband board. 'I wish Sean the best in whatever he's working on,' Mr Sheridan said. In 2018, Mr Sheridan and his business associate, Mr Melnik, were fined $25,000 (€21,400) each by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), arising from the issuing of misleading statements by Nutriband in 2017 and 2018, when the two men were the company's only full-time employees. Nutribrand chief executive Gareth Sheridan with chairman Sergei Melnik. Photograph: Instagram Six statements made during the period mischaracterised the company's products as not requiring regulatory approval in the US, the SEC said. Asked about the fines, Mr Sheridan said they had received advice from two attorneys and a dermatologist who had independently advised that FDA approval was not needed. He said in the business he was in, 'you have to rely on people who are experts in that space. I'm not for a second claiming that I'm an FDA attorney'. Mr Sheridan was asked for a response to a report that his business partner Mr Melnik, the US-resident Moldovan lawyer who is chairman and chief executive of Nutriband, was a shareholder in a company that bought Air Moldova in 2018 in a deal that became the subject of controversy in Moldova, leading to an inquiry by a parliamentary committee. 'It's not an issue in terms of trying to put a focus on the housing crisis in Ireland,' he said. Asked if he owned a home or invested in the private rental market he said: 'We have our house in Utah and we have a rental house in Utah. We rent in Dublin.' He added: 'There isn't a housing crisis in Salt Lake City Utah, there is in Dublin.' He drives a 'used 2021 Mercedes hybrid'.


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Man faces possible sale of €1.2m property if €350,000 debt to brothers not paid in six months
A man is facing the possible sale of his €1.2 million family property in Co Meath if he and his wife do not repay a €350,000 debt to his two brothers. The Court of Appeal had in 2023 found Alan and Derek Gaffney were entitled to judgment for US$372,043 (€350,000) against their brother Philip Gaffney, an Irish souvenir manufacturer, and his wife Teresa, of The Naul, Co Meath. The judgment sum arose from payments advanced by the plaintiff brothers so Philip Gaffney could fulfil a lucrative US €1.3 million 2015 order for Irish souvenirs with US-based Quality Value Choice Corporation (QVC), which runs a TV shopping channel and also has an online presence. Mr Gaffney's ceramic Irish products, such as leprechauns, cottages, fairy doors and mushrooms, were to feature as the firm's 'Today's Special Value' item on a date around St Patrick's Day in 2016, but the contract was pulled in February 2016. READ MORE The High Court previously held, on the balance of probabilities, that Philip Gaffney had lost the order or had to relinquish it due to not passing all the required tests and/or not being able to fulfil the order for 67,000 items by mid-March 2016. His brothers claimed they made various payments to Philip Gaffney and his wife between October 2015 and February 2016, as a loan to expand their workshop and obtain raw materials to be able to meet the QVC order. Alan Gaffney said the $372,043 comprised $272,043 from him and $100,000 from Derek Gaffey. In 2022, the High Court determined that $372.043 was owed by Philip Gaffney to his brothers but rejected their claim against Teresa Gaffney. It dismissed Philip Gaffney's proceedings against Alan Gaffney and his wife, alleging they had breached an agreement to invest €400,000 in his business. In May 2023, the Court of Appeal allowed an appeal by Alan and Derek Gaffney against the finding that Teresa Gaffney was not a party to the 2015 contract. It held that she had been an active participant in the business and entered total judgments for $372,043 against both. The judgments of the High Court and Court of Appeal were later registered as a judgment mortgage against the defendants' interests in their 0.75 hectares (1.4 acre) property in Naul, including a substantial family home and a 557sq m workshop. When no monies were paid towards the judgment debt, Alan and Derek Gaffney obtained an order from the Circuit Court in July 2024 declaring the judgment was registered as a burden on the Co Meath property. The Circuit Court orders were stayed pending appeal to the High Court. In opposing the appeal by Philip and Teresa Gaffney, Derek Gaffney said the defendants' products had featured on the Late Late Toy Show in late 2023 and this 'high profile TV placement' was 'galling' as the defendants were clearly still in business and selling their products. Mr Gaffney said, while refusing to pay them anything, the defendants were continuing to trade in the last eight years since they took the loan monies and continued to ignore the 'legal and moral obligation' to repay. Both plaintiffs said the failure to repay had cost them and their families considerable stress and difficulties. In his judgment published this week, Mr Justice Bradly said he proposed to make orders that the judgments totalling $372,043 were well charged against the defendants' interest in their Co Meath property. There has been 'a continuous refusal' by the defendants to repay the debt, he said. He also proposed to order the plaintiffs were entitled to details of any other encumbrances affecting the Co Meath property, and to an order for sale of the property if the judgment sums, plus interest, were not repaid within six months of the date of judgment. Final orders will be made in October when the judge said he will discuss whether there should be any stay on his orders.


Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Irish agricultural prices soar by almost 19%
Agricultural prices , often seen as a proxy for food prices, jumped by almost 19 per cent in the 12 months to June, according to the Central Statistics Office (CSO) . However, the figures marked a second modest monthly retreat. The agency's agricultural output price index, which monitors trends in prices paid to farmers for their produce, increased by 18.9 per cent on an annual basis in June. The surge in output prices was driven mainly by a dramatic increase in the price of cattle, which was 43.6 per cent ahead of the same time last year, even though prices dipped almost 2 per cent on May. Other meats saw much more modest increases with poultry prices 2.8 per cent up on June 2024, and the price of sheep and pigs effectively the same as a year ago. READ MORE Notable increases in output prices outside meat included milk – up 11.9 per cent over the past 12 months – and wool, which was almost a third higher. Eggs prices were 4.2 per cent up on June last year. [ Grocery price inflation jumps to almost 5% Opens in new window ] However, arable and crop farmers fared less well. The farm gate price paid for potatoes fell by 15.7 per cent compared to a year ago and there was also a marginal fall in cereal prices. On the input side, the costs of producing agricultural produce have risen by a more modest 0.6 per cent over the past year. Most costs are actually down on the same time in 2024, including energy, feed and seeds. However, there have been some notable increases. The cost of fertilisers was up 10.5 per cent year on year while veterinary expenses were up 4.7 per cent. [ Blame farmers not supermarkets for the rising price of food Opens in new window ] The CSO's figures come in the wake of an acceleration in food price inflation for consumers. Grocery price inflation increased to almost 5 per cent in July, nearly three times the rate of overall inflation, according to the CSO's latest consumer price index (CPI). The CPI showed headline inflation in the Irish economy dropped to 1.7 per cent in July, edging down from 1.8 per cent the previous month, as consumers benefited from cheaper clothes, air fares and transport fuels. However, the figures show that food prices rose at a significantly faster pace, up 4.7 per cent year-on-year, as consumers paid more for a range of basic food items.