Search

06 Sept 2025

262 derelict residential units were located in Kilkenny in December 2021

The latest GeoDirectory Residential Buildings Report has found that 265 new residential address points were added to the GeoDirectory database in 2021 in Kilkenny, while a further 302 residential buildings were under construction in the county in Q4 2021.  

The report found that the number of new residential address points added to the GeoDirectory database nationally in 2021 fell by 17.4% compared to the previous year.  

In total 18,047 new address points were recorded in Ireland in 2021, with over a quarter located in Dublin (29.6%), a year-on-year decrease of 26% in the capital. At 48.9%, almost half of the total of new addresses were found in the Greater Dublin Area of Dublin, Meath, Kildare and Wicklow.  

Residential Construction Activity Rebounds 

Following the temporary closure of construction sites in early 2021 due to Covid-19 public health measures, residential construction activity rallied strongly in the second half of 2021. In Q4 2021, 19,495 residential buildings were under construction, a notable 16.5% increase on the corresponding figure in Q4 2020.  

Residential construction activity was strongest in the Leinster region, with 59.7% of all buildings under construction in Q4 recorded in the province. At 15.1%, the highest share of the country’s residential construction activity was in Dublin, however this was 1.3 percentage points (ppts) lower than in Q4 2020.  

An increase in residential construction activity was recorded in 18 counties in Q4 2021, with the highest year-on-year increases in Offaly (+118.1%), Waterford (+70.2%) and Clare (+54.3%). Of the counties to register contractions in residential construction activity, the sharpest decreases were in Galway (-23.8%) and Leitrim (-22.4%). 

Slight Decline in National Vacancy Rate 

In Q4 2021, the vacancy rate in Kilkenny stood at 3.1%. This was lower than the national vacancy rate of 4.4%.  

In total, there were 90,158 vacant dwellings recorded in the State in Q4 2021, representing 4.4% of the national housing stock and a marginal 0.1ppt decrease since Q4 2020. Year-on-year residential vacancy rates decreased in 20 of the 26 counties.  

The lowest residential vacancy rates in the country were found in Dublin (1.4%), Kildare (2.1%), and both Waterford and Louth (2.8% each). Across the counties of Leinster, the average residential vacancy rate stood at 2.3%. 

The three counties with the highest residential vacancy rates in Q4 2021 were found in Connacht, which had a province-wide vacancy rate of 9.2%, down 0.2ppts on Q4 2020. Leitrim remained the county with the highest residential vacancy rate at 13.3%, although this was notably 1.3ppts lower than the previous year. After Leitrim, Mayo (11.9%) and Roscommon (11.6%) recorded the next highest vacancy rates. 

Number of Derelict Buildings falls by 7.3% since 2016 

GeoDirectory defines a derelict building as one which has typically been dormant for several years and requires structural work or reconstruction before it can be re-occupied. A total of 262 derelict residential units were located in Kilkenny in December 2021.  

In December 2021, there were 22,096 derelict residential units across the country. This represented a 7.3% drop in the number of units since December 2016.  

The bulk of derelict address points in December 2021 were located along the west coast of Ireland, with the highest percentage share of the national total found in Mayo (13.2%), followed by Donegal (12.0%) and Galway (8.8%).  

Increase in Residential Property Transactions  

The average residential property price in Kilkenny was €247,467 in the twelve months to October 2021, with a total of 691 transactions taking place. Looking specifically at the urban areas of the county, the average residential property price was in the city of Kilkenny was € 259,369.   

The average residential property price rose in every county over the period in question. The average national (not mix-adjusted) house price during the 12-month period to October 2021 was €321,596, an increase of 9.4% on the equivalent 2020 figure. Dublin remained the most expensive location to buy a house in Ireland, with an average price of €496,652. Neighbouring counties Wicklow (€428,493) and Kildare (€338,874) were the only other counties with residential property prices higher than the national average.  

The lowest average house price over the 12 months to October 2021 was recorded in Longford, at €142,298. This represents an increase of 64.3% vis-à-vis the average house price in Longford during the corresponding 12-month period in 2016 (€86,598). 

Commenting on the findings of the latest Residential Buildings Report, Dara Keogh, CEO of GeoDirectory said, “Covid-19 has proved to be a substantial speed-bump for the delivery of housing supply in Ireland. The knock-on impact of the closure of construction sites in early 2021 can be seen in the relatively low number of new address points added to the GeoDirectory database, which was down 17.4% on the previous year. However, residential construction activity has rebounded strongly since reopening fully in April, with 19,495 buildings recorded as being under construction in Q4 2021, the highest figure recorded since we started this report in 2014. This indicates a strengthening residential supply pipeline going into 2022.” 

Annette Hughes, Director, EY Economic Advisory said, “The level of housing supply coming onto the market in 2021 was well short of what was needed to meet demand. While the data around residential construction activity in the latter half of 2021 is extremely encouraging, there is still exceptionally high levels of demand in the housing market. This is evident from the significant increase in the average house price, up 9.4% nationally, with price increases recorded in every county. Based on our analysis for this report, the 90,158 vacant residential properties and the 22,096 derelict residential properties across Ireland should be investigated to ascertain if they can be returned to the housing stock, a move which would also support our retrofitting targets.” 

To continue reading this article,
please subscribe and support local journalism!


Subscribing will allow you access to all of our premium content and archived articles.

Subscribe

To continue reading this article for FREE,
please kindly register and/or log in.


Registration is absolutely 100% FREE and will help us personalise your experience on our sites. You can also sign up to our carefully curated newsletter(s) to keep up to date with your latest local news!

Register / Login

Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.

Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.