skip to main content

Cabinet sign off on plans to open €1bn housing infrastructure fund

Minister for Housing James Browne has said that the new application process will be 'quite short and quite sharp'
Minister for Housing James Browne has said that the new application process will be 'quite short and quite sharp'

Cabinet ministers have signed off on a €1 billion euro infrastructure fund which aims to accelerate house building.

Minister for Housing James Browne previously said the scheme is designed to provide funding for "shovel ready projects" in order to "activate" sites around the country which have planning permission for housing.

He added: "We expect to see shovels in the ground very very quickly."

Under the scheme, applicants will apply for grants to fund infrastructure and utilities which will allow construction to start on more housing developments.

A Housing Activation Office was established by Mr Browne last year with the aim of addressing barriers to the delivery of the public infrastructure.

Speaking to reporters at Government Buildings this morning, he said it was now "up and running" and has been engaging with local authorities "right around the country" about multiple "sites, roads and ESB issues".

He said potential projects have been "well identified", and he expects the application process to be "quite short, quite sharp, they should be ready to go".

Speaking on RTÉ's News At One Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers said the project is expected to deliver "in the next two to three years".

Applicants will need to pitch for grants and he said the "competitive edge" of the process will incentivise local authorities to deliver infrastructure more quickly.

The scheme is "about incentivising local authorities to prioritise infrastructure", Mr Chambers said.

Asked if local authorities should already have been doing that Mr Chambers said "many of them do" and the fund was designed to "compliment" the direct funding they already put into infrastructure delivery.