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1 Topics 2 Posts
  • What US Tech Did to Ireland

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    Other factors contribute to the housing crisis, of course, many of which the government seems unable or unwilling to overcome: an overreliance on private investment in housing, numerous planning delays, and the exit of large property developers after the 2008 crash. I visited Dublin about 10 years ago and was surprised at the skyline. No tall buildings. The tallest at the time I believe was about 16 or 17 stories. I was told by a local about the strong opposition as well as laws restricting the height of buildings. I always wondered how a metropolis like Dublin could continue to grow without growing "up" for greater housing density. Dublin has fantastic blend public transportation with the trolley, tram, and train. However, with without the ability to increase residential density, this meant that the costs of services would have to increase substantially to grow a population base "outward" instead of "upward". After reading the article, and the citation of the housing crisis becoming worse, I checked to see if anything had changed about the opinion about growing "up". My quick google search shows that the newest tallest building at 22 stories (not residential BTW) is being criticized for ruining the look of the city. So it looks like the opinion still holds. Is the lack of new highly dense housing a common topic regarding a way to address the lack of housing?