Stags Head
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I'm currently trying to buy an affordable house, though the chances of me getting anything close to the city centre will be slim. If/when I do get a chance to buy, I will be buying one of those 20% properties that you mention. I will have a mortgage for the property which will take up a good 40% of my income. I intend to maintain my property the same as anyone else in the development. I dont intend to hang my washing out on the balcony. Non of my family own a caravan, so I wont be letting them park in the car park.
JohnJay said:In other words - not all people who get Social/Affordable housing are bad...
You will be buying under the affordable housing scheme which is a different ball game altogether.
Actually, its not a different ball game. Under the Part V scheme, developers must give up 20% of their developments to the local authority who in turn break this up in to social housing OR affordable housing, as they see fit. So I will be part of the 20%
Hi
I just wanted to know what people's experience of social housing in their developments.
I was thinking of buying in this new development in heuston south quarter (www.hsq.ie) beside heuston station which launches on Thursday but I found out today that 2 beds START at 520k and since it was planned originally by DCC 20% of all apartments ON SITE will be social housing - seems a crazy price in the current dodgy marketplace for phase 1.
Anyway seems a bit too risky to me but maybe I've got it wrong? What have other people's experiences been with social housing in their developments?
I remember one of the architects from Cork City Council muttering darkly about the fact that some housing coops were cherry picking social housing tenants - meaning that the Council was being left with higher and higher concentrations of difficult cases. Unfortunately in Cork there are some particularly large ghettos of social housing - which means it is very difficult to resocialise (and I mean that very literally) these people. Policy has since changed, with the idea of dispersing social housing, but I would personally remain worried if a social housing unit were located near me.
That's true - I remember reading up on social housing in Germany. By "flooding the market" with social housing,(e.g. 50% of all housing being social housing) the stigma of social housing is removed, and as a consequence a good social mix is ensured.Its the councils fault for failing to build more social housing in the first place!
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