A number of residents of the Priory Hall apartment complex are to be offered temporary alternative housing by Dublin City Council this afternoon.
Residents were contacted on Friday about 42 available properties, which the council says have been matched to their needs.
37 NAMA properties and five voluntary housing properties have been assigned to owner occupiers only.
Residents will be able to pick up keys from 2pm at a Council office in Clongriffin in Dublin.
The office will remain open until late this evening to accommodate residents who are working during the day.
The properties will be made available under temporary convenience leasing agreements, which will run until the end of November, when remedial works at the apartment complex are due to be completed.
Priory Hall, a 187-apartment complex in Donaghmede, was evacuated by order of the High Court after it was found to pose a serious fire safety risk.
Until now, around 180 residents have been staying in hotels including the Regency Hotel in Whitehall and Bewley's Dublin Airport Hotel.
The council says the properties being offered are being provided free with no deposits necessary.
The properties on offer are a mixture of fully furnished, partially furnished and unfurnished housing units.
Dublin City Council said an agreement had been reached to give 57 residents in receipt of Rent Supplement, deposits to secure private rented accommodation instead of staying in hotels.
The council said 22 families have secured their own accommodation since leaving Priory Hall.
Labour TD Tommy Broughan has welcomed the decision to offer temporary alternative accommodation to residents of Priory Hall.
He said it "has been very difficult for residents to operate out of hotel accommodation over the last few weeks."