
Govt agrees €148m purchase of Citywest Hotel and campus
Minister for Justice, Jim O'Callaghan has said Cabinet has approved plans to proceed with the purchase of the Citywest Hotel and campus in Dublin for €148.2m.
The State has been leasing the property since 2020 when it was used as a Covid vaccination site.
Since 2022, it was used to house those in need of temporary protection and more recently for international protection applicants.
Speaking at Government Buildings, Minister O'Callaghan said: "It really does represent value for money in terms of the amount of money we're spending on the private commercial sector as opposed to the savings that can be achieved if we own our own accommodation."
Minister O'Callaghan said €148.2 million purchase price would result in significant savings over time.
"It's going to be far cheaper in the long-term in terms of owning it as opposed to the cost we're paying at present per person in the accommodation."
In a statement, the Department of Justice said the purchase of the facility was part of a "long-term strategy to developing a sustainable accommodation system", and that the "site will deliver significant long-term savings to the State as its moves from licencing to ownership".
The Department also said securing the site in State ownership would "enable Ireland to meet requirements under the new EU Pact on Migration and Asylum".
Protest by residents
Asked about protests outside Leinister House last week by residents opposing the purchase, Minister of State Colm Brophy said "we are not changing over all what is happening in Citywest at the moment in terms of numbers and Citywest has actually been working very effectively in terms of having an IPAS centre there and Ukrainians also".
He said the campus has offered a range of services effectively for several years.
Minister Brophy said that by owning Citywest "we can save effectively 50% of the operating costs".
Minister O'Callaghan said, in terms of the programme for Government, the plan is to own 14,000 accommodation units for those seeking international protection.
Hashtags

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


RTÉ News
7 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Central Bank revises down housing and growth forecast
The Central Bank is revising downwards its forecast for how many homes will be built this year and over the following two years. It expects 32,500 will be finished this year, a reduction of 1,500 on its previous forecast last March. It says 37,500 will be completed next year, down 2,500 from its last projection, and 41,500 will completed in 2027, down 2,500. It would mean the Government would miss its targets for house completions each year. The Central Bank says the reasons for the downward revision is that completions of homes are below expectations in the first three months of the year, while commencements "dropped sharply". The housing projections are "subject to considerable downside risk given the current bottlenecks in housing supply and infrastructure," according to the bank. The Central Bank highlights a lack of water and electricity connections and a shortfall of construction workers as key challenges for increasing construction. It says increasing productivity in the sector is "essential to enable it to fulfil the increasing demand for housing". The bank is also downgrading its forecast for growth for the domestic economy for this year and next year due to US tariffs. It expects the growth, as measured by modified domestic demand, will be 2% this year, a drop 0.6 percentage points on the previous projection. It has reduced its forecast for next year by 0.4 percentage points to 2.1%. While the outlook for the domestic economy is down, the expectations for gross domestic product, which includes the impact of multinationals, is being raised due to a surge in exports to the US ahead tariffs being imposed by the Trump administration. This is largely being driven by a rise in the export of weight loss and diabetics drugs produced by the pharmaceutical sector in Ireland. Robert Kelly Director of Economics and Statistics at the Central Bank says: "with the global economic backdrop continuing to shift, there is heightened uncertainty on the outlook for the Irish economy." The bank examines the threat to the public finance from a collapse in the windfall corporation tax receipts collected by the State. It finds that in a severe scenario, there would be a €17bn deficit by 2030.

Irish Times
8 hours ago
- Irish Times
‘This isn't about race or colour. This is about our community': Locals protest at sale of Citywest Hotel
Approximately 100 residents from the Saggart area staged a protest against the sale of the Citywest Hotel to the Government for permanent use as asylum seeker accommodation. It was the third night of protests outside the hotel which the Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan has said will now be purchased by the State for €148 million. On Friday residents staged a convoy through the village passing Citywest. They escalated it to a peaceful protest outside the gates on Tuesday and Wednesday evening. The 764-bed hotel and conference centre has been leased by the State since 2020. It was initially used as a Covid-19 testing and vaccination centre before, in 2022, being converted to an accommodation and processing facility for asylum seekers and Ukrainian refugees. READ MORE Locals claim to have gathered more than 8,000 signatures going door-to-door in Saggart, Rathcoole and Citywest. 'Ninety per cent of the doors we called to signed that petition. It shows that 90 per cent of people in the areas around here do not want this,' said Amanda Higgins. Locals say Saggart has doubled in size since 2011 and the population went up by 46 per cent in the census between 2016 and 2022, but it does not have the facilities to cope with demand. The village has one pub, two restaurants and no hotel, a small Dunnes Stores and a small Centra. They fear they will lose access on the Citywest site to the gym and swimming pool, though the Government has stated that those facilities will remain open to the public. One woman said there is a large Indian community living locally which is supporting the protests on the basis that the permanent loss of the amenity will be detrimental to all residents. 'This isn't about race or colour. This is about our community. We are making a stand together,' she said. [ State to purchase Citywest hotel for €148m and use it as asylum seeker accommodation Opens in new window ] Mia Colgan said locals accepted its status as a Covid-19 centre, then as a centre for processing Ukrainian refugees and its current status as both an International Protection Accommodation Service (IPAS) centre and a place for Ukrainian refugees. But they would not accept the permanent loss of the hotel as a facility for the local community without any other hotel locally. 'We were told we were going to get this and going to get that. It has never transpired. They had a duty of care to the residents and they have not discharged it,' she said. 'Now they are saying five years down the road when they want to take the hotel out forever out of the public amenities, now we will discuss it with you. It's too little too late. 'We are asking for dignity for everybody and for the Government to do their job. The Government is not being transparent. It is riding roughshod over everybody.' She queried why the State was paying €148 million for Citywest when it was sold by Nama for €30 million in 2013.


The Irish Sun
9 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
My hardware shop survived two world wars, recessions & Covid – now Rachel Reeves has KO'd it after 160 years
FOR 160 years Mogford & Son has been a trusty hardware shop just like the one seen in the Two Ronnies' famous 'fork handles' sketch. But running a small independent shop has become no laughing matter for its current owner Paul Gillam. 5 After 160 years, surviving two world wars and Covid, rising costs have sounded the death knell for Mogford & Son Credit: Jon Rowley 5 A snap of W.H Mogfrod & Son taken in 1920 Credit: Jon Rowley 5 Current owner Paul Gillam has blamed rising costs, including Rachel Reeves' National Insurance hike, for having to shutter the store for good Credit: AP Because of a tsunami of rising costs, including Rachel Reeves' employer National Insurance increase, Paul, 57, has been forced to call it a day. At the end of September Mogford — one of Britain's oldest shops — will close its doors for the final time. This Aladdin's cave has survived two world wars, READ MORE UK NEWS Close to tears, Paul told The Sun: 'I'm working seven days a week but things have got more expensive. From staffing costs to National Insurance and bank charges. 'The car park up the road has started to charge £2, so people can no longer park for free, because the council is short of cash. My business rates keep going up. 'It's been a hard decision but I can't carry on.' Standing at the till, Paul is surrounded by thousands of objects for the home, from bamboo and compost to jubilee clips and, of course, candles. Most read in The Sun He has a wry smile as he poses with four candles, like shopkeeper There are house numbers, bolts, rabbit food and aquarium cleaners all stacked neatly on shelving that has carried everything the local community could want for the past century and a half. Popular bank with over 400 spots confirms it is shutting 18 branches in August – it follows 148 closures by rivals Paul's wife Babs, 55, who has been working in the shop since two staff retired recently, not to be replaced, says: 'The Government say they want to keep High Streets open but then all the banks close. "Then the car parks start charging, then the shops close. People end up going online or to one of the big retailers.' The car park up the road has started to charge £2, so people can no longer park for free, because the council is short of cash. My business rates keep going up. Paul To try to counter the online threat, Paul's shop has a Facebook page and offers a delivery service. He charges £1 for anything under £20 and free delivery on orders over 20 quid. Paul makes just £1.60 on a bag of compost and in 30 years of working at Mogford he has never increased all his prices at once to keep pace with inflation. He raises prices as little as possible and he reluctantly puts a £3 limit on the card machine because of the cost of using it. Paul would have liked his daughter Sophie and grandson James to take over but he decided they would be better off in jobs with a future . Paul remembers walking past Mogford's shop as a boy. He says: 'There was everything round here. 'Clothes shops, shoe shops, butchers, fishmongers, greengrocers. You could get every single thing you wanted.' He points across the road to the shops that have closed down — a newsagent's, a women's accessories shop and a shoe repair bar. He says: 'When Covid happened, we were considered an essential business. I will close the doors with a heavy heart Paul 'We extended our hours, opening at 6am and not closing until 9pm because our footfall went up so much with people working from home, and we wanted to help.' When The Sun visited, all morning there was a steady stream of customers coming in to buy goods from washers to dog bowls , super glue to carpet cleaner. Paul knows most of them by name and all seem upset that the shop will be gone in just ten weeks' time. They say it's the latest nail in the coffin for their High Street and they don't know what they'll do when Paul locks up for the final time. He says: 'I will close the doors with a heavy heart. 'It's not for lack of trying either but there's simply nothing I can do. I'm breaking even and have been for a while, so I've been left with no choice.' 5 Paul told The Sun: 'I'm working seven days a week but things have got more expensive. From staffing costs to National Insurance and bank charges' Credit: Jon Rowley 5 Paul knows most of the customers by name, and all seem upset that the shop will be gone in just ten weeks' time Credit: Jon Rowley