Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Daft.ie is a real estate and property rental website in Ireland, launched in 1997. [2] The website was co-founded by brothers Brian and Eamonn Fallon, who each held a 23.66% share in the business as of October 2021. [3] As of September 2024, the website attracted 2.5 million users every month, according to the Irish Examiner. [4]
This is a list of historic houses in the Republic of Ireland which serves as a link page for any stately home or historic house in Ireland. County Carlow [ edit ]
Hibernia Real Estate Group Ltd, formerly called Hibernia REIT plc when it was a public real estate investment trust, [5] is a real estate development firm headquartered in Dublin, Ireland. The company owns 32 properties in Dublin, and has a portfolio valued at € 1.309 billion.
“An agent can place your home in your regional multiple listing service, which will broadcast your home for sale to other websites with massive audiences,” says Chuck Vander Stelt, a Northwest ...
Ghost estate of approx 10 houses outside village of Bridgetown, County Wexford, 2012.(In Use as of 2024) In October 2010, the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government reported, using a restricted brief, that there were 33,000 complete or nearly complete empty homes after a national audit and that there were a further 10,000 homes at various stages of construction. [12]
IRES is Ireland's largest private landlord with over 3,884 units under its ownership as of January 2020. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] After Hibernia REIT was taken over by Brookfield Asset Management in June 2022, IRES was the final Irish REIT to remain a publicly listed company.
McInerney Holdings PLC (trading variously as McInerney Properties and McInerney Homes) was an Irish construction and development company with a focus on housebuilding, which existed from 1909 until 2011. The company initially focused on the Irish market but later expanded to the UK, Middle East and mainland Europe.
Belvedere House and Gardens is a country house located approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi) from Mullingar, County Westmeath in Ireland on the north-east shore of Lough Ennell. [1] It was built in 1740 as a hunting lodge for Robert Rochfort, 1st Earl of Belvedere by architect Richard Cassels, one of Ireland's foremost Palladian architects. [2]