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Ireland’s Garden-Dwelling Boom Will Be Won On Compliance, Not Price.

Ireland may be about to create an entirely new residential construction market, but the opportunity is being misunderstood.

In April, the Irish Government announced proposed planning exemptions that would allow a detached auxiliary dwelling of between 32 m² and 45 m² to be built behind an existing home and connected to the main house’s services. The detailed conditions have not yet been finalised, and the regulations still require environmental assessment and Oireachtas approval.

That distinction matters. This is not simply permission to place a larger garden room beside the patio. It is a proposal to create a new home without the conventional planning process.

Home not a shed!

And a home is not a shed with better finishes.
The Government has explicitly stated that all relevant Building Regulations, Building Control requirements and fire-safety rules will continue to apply. Removing planning permission does not remove the obligation to design, construct and certify a safe, energy-efficient dwelling.

That is where the real market disruption begins.
Ireland already has a capable garden-room sector supplying offices, gyms, studios and leisure spaces. Many of those companies deliver attractive buildings quickly and efficiently. But a structure intended for occasional use is fundamentally different from a dwelling occupied every day and night.
A compliant home must address structure, insulation, ventilation, airtightness, energy performance, drainage, fire safety, radon protection, access and long-term durability. Depending on the final regulatory route, it may also require professional design input, a commencement notice, inspection documentation, energy assessment and completion certification.
These obligations are not administrative extras. They are the product.

The commercial risk is obvious. Homeowners may compare two buildings that appear almost identical online: one offered as an inexpensive “garden pod” and another priced as a fully designed and certified dwelling. The cheaper option may win at the kitchen table because the most important differences are hidden inside the floor, walls, roof, ventilation system and compliance file.
Those differences may only become visible years later — during a sale, an insurance claim, a mortgage application or an investigation following a fire or structural failure.

That creates four urgent challenges for the industry.
First, design must become repeatable. The strongest providers will develop standardised systems that can be engineered, energy-modelled and documented once, then adapted responsibly for each site.
Second, buyers need meaningful protection. A marketing promise or company guarantee is not the same as independent certification, professional indemnity cover and a credible structural warranty.
Third, contractors need a clear delivery process. Responsibility for design, assigned roles, inspections, testing and handover documentation must be established before work begins — not assembled retrospectively when a customer asks for proof.
Fourth, the public needs better information. “Planning exempt” must never be allowed to become shorthand for “unregulated.”

There is also confusion around tax. Revenue currently allows up to €14,000 of qualifying Rent-a-Room income to be exempt from Income Tax, PRSI and USC. However, current guidance says a detached self-contained unit does not qualify. The Government has only committed to considering how auxiliary dwellings might interact with the relief.
The opportunity remains substantial. Families need flexible accommodation. Adult children need routes to independence. Older homeowners need options. Ireland needs additional housing capacity.

But the winners will not be the businesses that manufacture the cheapest box.
They will be the contractors and partners that can deliver a genuine home: designed correctly, built safely, tested properly, certified transparently and supported long after handover.
That is the standard serious builders should establish before the first advertising campaign begins.

In this market, compliance will not slow the sale. Compliance will be the sale.

Thousands Of Irish Extras Sought For Major Historical TV Production.

Aspiring screen performers and anyone curious about life on a television set are being invited to apply as extras for the second season of a major historical drama filming in County Wicklow.

The Amazon Prime production, currently operating under the codename “Bluetooth,” has been described as an epic “swords and shields” saga. Its first season has already been filmed and is expected to premiere early next year, while production on the second instalment is due to run from August until November 2026.

Casting organisers hope to recruit thousands of people from across Ireland for a wide variety of scenes. No previous acting experience is required, and applications are welcomed from people of different ages, appearances, ethnicities, religions and cultural backgrounds.

The team is also interested in applicants with distinctive skills or experience, including musicians, athletes, tradespeople, animal handlers and speakers of different languages. However, the organisers have stressed that this is not an exhaustive list and that everyone who meets the basic eligibility requirements is encouraged to attend.

Following an earlier casting session in Newtownmountkennedy, the remaining open calls will be held at the Camden Court Hotel, Camden Street Lower, Dublin 2, on Monday, 13th July and Tuesday, 14th July, from 10am until 5pm each day.

No appointment is necessary, and applicants only need to attend one session. The process is expected to take approximately 20 minutes and will involve completing an application form and having a photograph taken.
The opportunity is open to adults and young people aged 16 years or over. Applicants must be living in Ireland on a full-time basis and must have a valid PPS number and permission to work in the country.

Parents or guardians interested in applying on behalf of children under 16 can request a separate application form by emailing extras@btproductions.ie.

Successful applicants could be offered paid work during the production period, although some people may be contacted at short notice to attend filming or costume fittings.

For anyone interested in history, film, television or acting, or simply looking for an unusual experience, the chance to meet new people and earn some extra money, the open casting call offers an opportunity to become part of a large-scale historical production filmed against some of Ireland’s most striking scenery.

Death Of Eileen Sussex, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, on Friday 10th July 2026, of Mrs Eileen Sussex (formerly Tolton) (née Shine), Castleview, Liskeveen, Littleton, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by Joe Tolton, Sidney Sussex, and daughter Jackie Tolton; Mrs Sussex passed away peacefully at Fenor Hill Nursing Home, Urlingford, Co. Kilkenny.

Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving sons Steve and Andy, stepsons Paul and Graham, daughters-in-law Kim, Julie, Rachael, Louise and Joanne, grandchildren Karley, Michael, Danny, Shannon, Caitlin, Bradley, Patsy and Abbie, great-grandson Felix, extended relatives, kind neighbours and friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mrs Sussex will repose at Devitt’s Funeral Home, The Green Cashel, Co. Tipperary, (Eircode E25 P383) on Wednesday evening, July 15th, from 6:30pm until 7:30pm.
Her funeral cortège will be received into the Church of St Peter, Moycarkey, Thurles, on Thursday morning, July 16th, to further repose for Requiem Mass at 10:30am, followed by interment, immediately afterwards, in nearby St Peter’s Cemetery, Moycarkey, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

The extended Sussex family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Passenger Partially Pulled Through Ryanair Window.

Engine shows damage on Ryanair 737.

What Is Known About the Ryanair Emergency Over Greece.

A Ryanair-operated flight from Thessaloniki, Greece, to Memmingen, Germany, was forced to return shortly after takeoff on Friday, July 10, after a passenger window became dislodged and the cabin rapidly lost pressure.

The flight was operated by Malta Air, a Ryanair subsidiary, using a Boeing 737-800 aircraft.

A 61-year-old passenger sitting beside the damaged window was partially pulled through the opening. Witnesses said his head, neck and shoulders were outside the aircraft before nearby passengers managed to pull him back inside.
The passenger suffered neck and shoulder injuries and friction burns. His injuries were reported as non-life-threatening.

Oxygen masks deployed during the decompression, and the pilots returned safely to Thessaloniki. The remaining passengers were later taken to Germany on a replacement aircraft.
The US National Transportation Safety Board said it had been informed of a right-engine problem and cabin decompression. Early reports suggest engine debris may have struck the aircraft and dislodged the window, but the exact cause has not yet been officially established.

Because the incident reportedly occurred in North Macedonian airspace, North Macedonia’s aviation authorities are leading the investigation, with assistance from other aviation agencies and manufacturers.
Despite some dramatic descriptions online, the passenger was not completely sucked out of the aircraft. He was partially pulled through the window and rescued by fellow passengers.

The investigation is continuing, and early claims about the precise mechanical failure should be treated as preliminary until an official report is released.

€102.8m Deloitte Spend Sparks Calls For Review Of State IT Outsourcing.

The Government is facing renewed scrutiny over the Department of Social Protection’s reliance on external technology providers after figures revealed that €102.8 million was paid to Deloitte between 2020 and 2025.

The expenditure covered consultancy and specialist IT services, including digital-product development, production support and work connected with MyGovID. Spending reached its highest annual level in 2024, when payments to the professional-services firm totalled €22.2 million.

Social Democrats social protection spokesperson Mr Eoin Hayes described the scale of the expenditure as deeply concerning and urged the Government to strengthen the public sector’s ability to design, operate and maintain its own digital systems.
He argued that essential technical expertise should be developed within the State rather than repeatedly purchased from private companies. Mr Hayes has called for a comprehensive audit of the external firms engaged by the department to establish whether taxpayers are receiving adequate value.
He also warned that unnecessary spending on contractors reduces the funding available to support people experiencing persistent poverty, including lone parents, disabled people and older people living alone.

The Department of Social Protection defended its use of external specialists, pointing to the scale and complexity of the systems required to administer more than €27 billion in social-protection services during 2024.

A departmental spokesperson said welfare services depend heavily on secure and reliable technology, with payments being processed every week. The department described ICT expenditure as an investment in maintaining an efficient social-protection system and said projects are subject to central oversight and ongoing value-for-money monitoring. It added that Deloitte personnel work alongside the department’s internal technology teams and that some specialist services are available only through external IT providers.
The department maintains that its consultancy expenditure has delivered value for money.