Skip to main content

Allsop Space September Auction Results...

Lot Type Location Reserve Price will not exceed this figure
1 Investment Flat Dublin 1 Sold €160,000
2 Leasehold Flat Dublin 4 Sold €130,000
3 Vacant Flat Blackrock €185,000
4 Vacant Flat Howth Sold €183,000
5 Vacant Flat Galway City Sold €144,000
6 Leasehold Flat Dublin 1 Sold €167,500
7 Leasehold Flat Dublin 8 Sold €92,000
8 Vacant Freehold House Clara Sold €72,000
9 Vacant Leasehold House Renvyle Sold €110,000
10 Vacant Flat Blackrock Sold After
11 Investment Freehold House Loughrea Sold €127,000
12 Vacant Freehold House Lackaghmore Sold €164,000
13 Vacant Freehold Building Fermoy Withdrawn
14 Vacant Freehold House Ballyjamesduff Sold €79,000
15 Leasehold Flat Dublin 1 Withdrawn
16 Investment Flat Dublin 8 Sold €116,000
17 Vacant Freehold Building Gorey Sold €120,000
18 Investment Freehold Building Rathgar Sold €320,000
19 Investment Freehold Building Rathgar Sold €459,000
20 Investment Flat Salthill Sold €158,000
21 Investment Freehold Building Dublin 12 Sold €190,000
22 Vacant Flat Dublin 7 Sold €108,000
23 Vacant Freehold Building Dublin 9 €230,000
24 Investment Freehold Building Wexford Town Sold €470,000
25 Investment Freehold House Abbeyleix €75,000
26 Investment Flat Limerick City Sold €88,000
27 Investment Flat Dublin 8 Sold €120,000
28 Vacant Freehold House Rooskey Sold €107,500
29 Investment Freehold Building Dublin 7 Sold €1.15M
30 Leasehold Flat Dublin 1 Sold €121,000
31 Industrial Athlone Withdrawn
32 Vacant Freehold House Oranmore Sold €80,000
33 Vacant Flat Bundoran Sold €42,000
34 Leasehold Flat Blackrock Sold €470,000
35 Vacant Flat Dublin 3 Sold €68,000
36 Investment Freehold Building Rathgar Sold €485,000
37 Investment Freehold House Ballinasloe Sold €88,000
38 Investment Flat Dublin 4 Sold €137,000
39 Vacant Freehold House Limerick City Sold After
40 Vacant Freehold House Mitchelstown €170,000
41 Investment Freehold House Dublin 15 Sold €151,000
42 Investment Freehold Building Gorey Sold €30,000
43 Investment Freehold House Abbeyleix Sold €100,000
44 Leasehold Flat Limerick Sold €37,000
45 Vacant Freehold House Craughwell €130,000
46 Investment Freehold House Portumna Sold €58,000
47 Investment Freehold House Dromod €100,000
48 Investment Flat Dublin 2 Sold €127,500
49 Vacant Freehold House Athlone €50,000
50 Investment Flat Dublin 8 Sold €128,000
51 Investment Flat Monkstown Sold €137,500
52 Investment Freehold House Gorey Sold €55,000
53 Investment Freehold House Abbeyleix Sold €81,000
54 Investment Dublin 1 Sold €275,000
55 Investment Freehold Building Dublin 7 €265,000
56 Investment Flat Dublin 8 Sold €135,000
57 Leasehold Flat Cratloe Sold €112,000
58 Business Kildare Sold €560,000
59 Investment Flat Dublin 15 Sold €98,000
60 Investment Freehold House Gorey Sold €70,000
61 Investment Freehold Building Dublin 8 Withdrawn
62 Investment Flat Dublin 8 Sold €123,000
63 Land/Site Bullaun Sold €63,000
64 Investment Freehold House Blackrock Sold €275,000
65 Vacant Freehold House Dublin 9 €295,000
66 Investment Freehold Building Dublin 7 Sold €157,500
67 Leasehold Flat Dublin 1 Withdrawn
68 Investment Freehold Building Bray €375,000
69 Investment Freehold House Blackrock Sold €430,000
70 Leasehold Flat Dublin 2 Withdrawn
71 Investment Flat Dublin 8 Sold €124,000
72 Investment Freehold House Dublin 8 Sold €110,000
73 Investment Freehold House Dublin 15 Sold €127,000
74 Investment Flat Dublin 15 Sold €104,000
74 Lots sorted by Lot Number Lots: 1-74

Popular posts from this blog

Property Ireland - Irish Land Values Go Up Like A Rocket & Fall Like A Stone...

Land values go up like a rocket and fall like a stone... SITE EVALUATION: Why would a developer bid €225,000 an acre in 1999 and €2.8m an acre in 2007? Bill Nowlan explains WHY HAS THE value of development land fallen so precipitously, by over 50 per cent in the past 12 months, when residential and other property values have only fallen by 25 per cent or 30 per cent? There is an old property cliché which says that "land values go up like a rocket and fall like a stone" and this seems to have been bourne out in Ireland over recent years. Why does this happen? To answer this question requires an insight into the way developers prepare their bids for development land and I set out below a glimpse into that process. Let me start by looking at how a developer in normal times estimates his bid for a plot of land with planning permission, which in estate agents' parlance is ready-to-go. The key starting point in a developers equations is the expected sale price of the finished b...

Property Crash Homes For Sale...

Hundreds of repossessed homes in Ireland to be sold by auction... UK property consultancy Allsop to hold auction in April at Dublin's Shelbourne hotel: Flats in Ireland that could have fetched €150,000 in the Celtic Tiger years are to be put on the market for as little as €25,000 (£21,000) in the country's first ever mass auction of repossessed homes. And, in a sign of how wide the property crash is, the latest item to turn up in liquidation sales in Dublin is a job lot of 15 cranes, including a pair towering over Anglo Irish Bank's half-built headquarters in the city's docklands. "Tower cranes were among the most sought-after heavy plant and machinery 10 years ago," Ricky Wilson of Wilsons Auctions says. "You couldn't buy them quick enough. Now they are left idle for two or three years on sites." He has 15 cranes worth €500,000 going on sale on 26 March, with German, Dutch and Polish buyers expressing interest. But it is the auction ...

As Featured On Dublin Postcards, Ad's, U2 Video...

I see in the Irish Independent today an item concerning a favourite, Dublin landmark, of mine... "THEY have featured in numerous postcards and a very famous Guinness ad, but perhaps their most important cameo appearance came when they featured in U2s 'Pride (In The Name Of Love)' video. However, Dublin City Council does not believe the Poolbeg chimneys are iconic enough to place on their Record of Protected Structures. Following a request from Cllr Dermot Lacey (Lab) to have the landmark ESB chimneys placed on the protected record, city councillors heard that city planners had conducted a survey, history and full assessment of the chimneys. They concluded from this that while the Poolbeg chimneys were considered to be of a certain level of architectural, social and historical significance, they were not of sufficient value within the meaning of the Planning and Development Act, 2000. Complex The twin red and white chimney stacks measure 680 feet in height and were construc...