Housing costs continue to rise – The Irish Times

Average cost of construction a two-room apartment According to the Department of Housing in Dublin it is now almost €600,000. The costs – identified in the department’s Total Investment Cost Study – highlight the difficulties in building the housing that would be necessary to stem the housing shortage. According to Eoin Burke-Kennedy, the cost of providing a two-bedroom apartment in Dublin ranged from €549,790 in the suburbs to €591,783 in urban areas.

British neobank Monzo contacted former Stripe executive Michael Carney lead your march to the European Unionappointing two Irishmen to be responsible for key expansion plans.

As Prime Minister Simon Harris confirms a general election will take place before the end of the year, Eoin takes a look big economic problems that can help shape your campaign.

AIB is investing €40 million to modernize almost two-thirds of its facilities Network of 170 branches by the end of next year, saying the work will reduce the group’s greenhouse gas emissions by a further 10 percent as it aims to achieve net zero emissions across all its operations by 2030, reports Joe Brennan.

University College Dublin (UCD) has partnered with the new Codling Wind Park project related to offshore wind energyto investigate the potential for restoring native oyster reefs and seagrass habitats at selected sites in the Dublin Bay area. Eoin has a story.

Eoin also reports on a new report from Grant Thornton which shows that only 16 per cent of Irish businesses see geopolitical disruptions before the war or Donald Trump’s second US presidency as a “potential constraint” compared to the global average of 43%.

In her column, Pilita Clark asks a question that seemed obvious a few years ago but seems less clear now. Namely, why people don’t stay home when they are sick instead of walking into work and potentially infecting your co-workers.

Finally, Kevin Johnson of the Credit Union Development Association explains why: a new era in lending in Ireland for trade unions and how they can finally fill the gap left by the exit of most building societies from the market here.

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