Smyth urges regulation of housing development land

Seen & Heard: solicitor give Coalition proposals about Dublin housing crisis

Noel Smyth: said it is imperative that sites controlled by the National Asset Management Agency are not offered into the market without clear and unequivocal commitments from those agreeing to purchase them. Photograph: Peter Thursfield
Noel Smyth: said it is imperative that sites controlled by the National Asset Management Agency are not offered into the market without clear and unequivocal commitments from those agreeing to purchase them. Photograph: Peter Thursfield

Private-equity and buyout funds that acquire development land should be regulated to preventing them from hoarding it, according to property developer and solicitor Noel Smyth.

Writing in the Sunday Independent, Mr Smyth said it is imperative that sites controlled by the National Asset Management Agency are not offered into the market without clear and unequivocal commitments from those agreeing to purchase them.

He has presented detailed proposals to Minister for the Environment Alan Kelly aimed at providing a solution to Dublin's housing crisis.

He said that up to 25,000 houses could be built in Dublin over the next three years if the Government was to direct Nama to boost the contruction industry and deal with the housing shortage. Among the measures proposed is a licensing system whereby developers would not own houses built by them until they were completed.

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