In the frenzy to buy up land around the golden triangle marked out by Pembroke Road, Shelbourne Road and Landsdowne Road in Ballsbridge, no deal was as costly as the purchase of Hume House in 2005 by NAMA-bound developer Sean Dunne and his Mountbrook company. The owners of Hume House at the time, Irish Life, swapped their building on 0.66 acres of land for new office accommodation in Dublin’s Docklands. Hume House was valued at €130m in the swap, though Sean Dunne subsequently sued CB Richard Ellis claiming that the valuation should have been in the €65-95m range. At €130m for 0.66 acres, that worked out at €197m an acre, a record even amongst the spate of high value deals in Ballsbridge at the time, as shown in the table below.
And today we hear that Sean Dunne has had planning permission approval to develop Hume House. The development doesn’t have an announced name yet but the “Y Building” might be a suggestion as that is what the 16,000 sq metres of office space over 3,000 sq metres of basement will resemble at road level. The planning application has had troubled progress with objectors claiming that Sean only wanted the permission to increase the value of the site to NAMA. Indeed, although Sean is reportedly NAMA-bound, it is unclear whether loans for the Hume building are from NAMA banks as Sean has in the past used non-NAMA banks. It has been noted that 25% of office space in the capital currently lies empty and Sean has not confirmed whether the development will proceed which would have made this a very tricky asset to value.
UPDATE: 9th August, 2010. More good news for Sean Dunne as the Independent reports that land adjacent to Hume House – the site of the Jurys/Berkeley Court hotels also owned by Sean Dunne – has been granted planning permission for “568 apartments and a 135-bedroom hotel” together with a “15-storey tower, with shops, restaurants, bars, healthcare facilities and a creche”. The permission comes with 28 conditions and the Independent suggests there may be appeals.
UPDATE: 14th February, 2011. A setback for Sean Dunne with news at the end of last week that An Bord Pleanala (the national authority for determining building permit issues) has overturned a decision by Dublin City Council which had approved the development of the site of former AIB HQ. The future for the 3.25 acre site bought by Sean in 2006 for €200m is now uncertain with Sean’s planning representative saying that the future is now in Sean’s hands. What is the €200m site worth today? Possibly around €50m if the site has suffered a representative decline in development property prices.
UPDATE: 19th September, 2011. An Bord Pleanala has finally approved a scheme for the Jurys/Berkeley Court hotels site. The plans allow the construction of 11 towers which will house 490 residential units, an hotel and retail. The Sunday Business Post reports that the equity in the scheme is now owned entirely by the lenders, Ulster Bank, ACC Bank and Kaupthing Singer & Friedlander. It is claimed that if the project reaches a value of €220-250m, then Sean will be released from his personal guarantee obligations with these lenders.
Are you sure the “Dunner” is heading for NAMA?
Did he not do a deal with Ulster bank which is not going to NAMA?
Unless developers admit they are in NAMA, we really don’t have any way of being certain who is going, or indeed has already gone to NAMA – NAMA have said that they will not normally reveal the identity of borrowers. So all we really have is media speculation (most of which is pretty well informed as far as I can see). The Irish Times article linked to below to which Simon Carswell contributed identified Sean Dunne as possibly being NAMA-bound. As far as I can see he has mostly been associated in the past with non-NAMA banks, Ulster would be one of them. That is not to say he didn’t have any loans from the NAMA banks. So in answer to your question, no I’m not at all sure that he is going to NAMA and if he is I’m not sure whether any loan on Hume House would be eligible. And as noted in the entry above the objections by some to the planned redevelopment on the basis that all Sean wanted was permission to bump up the price to NAMA may well be groundless.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2010/0604/1224271816146.html
P.S. NWL,
A very Happy New Year, and thank you for a great website. One day (hopefully sooner rather than later) this will be the source of record for all truth relating to NAMA. You deserve much credit for setting it up and for the input and expertise that is evident in it. I for one am very grateful to you.
[…] man who bought the most expensive site in Ireland” – there would seem to have been at least foursite purchases that were more expensive, at least on a per-acre basis. The Independent does provide more details […]