Your contributions will help us continue to deliver the stories that are important to you
Here are the world's favourite new buildings
A Manhattan skyscraper, a Chinese airport and a house on a sled in New Zealand all feature.
Your contributions will help us continue to deliver the stories that are important to you
A Manhattan skyscraper, a Chinese airport and a house on a sled in New Zealand all feature.
From castles to caravans, Ireland’s holiday home stock is an eclectic crowd.
Want to take the tour of the gaff?
Unsurprisingly, Palo Alto dominates the list.
A glut of cash buyers, homeowners anchored by negative equity and tracker mortgages – in Dublin, the situation for young people trying to buy is alarming.
Because who wouldn’t like the freedom to run around a church by themselves, right?
It’s worth a tidy $6.499 million.
A hotel on stilts, a winding winery and a vibrant Walmart office are among the winners.
It is confusingly called Tsunami House, though.
Abbeville, the Georgian mansion belonging to the former Taoiseach, had been on the market for 18 months after the company that owned it went into receivership.
The magazines are dirty, but the floors are pristine.
The calls are coming from inside the house…
It’s only €7,500 a month, you know.
The Quality Hotel & Suites, Killarney is up for sale for €3 million.
Loreto Abbey was put on the market by David Carson, receiver of Lozeto Ltd.
Oh, did we mention the deal includes use of a yacht?
Let’s have a gawk around.
Let’s have a gawk around.
It went on sale in Dubai earlier this week. Arab Sheikhs are going crazy for it.
Here’s a clue: expensive. It looks expensive.
You even get your very own waterfall…
The penthouse apartment at the Pierre Hotel is on the market – and if it sells, it will set a new record for a New York City gaff.
The singer’s childhood home in Donegal is for sale.
Because hey, who wouldn’t want to own their own island?
The four-storey building is up for rent after HMV closed down all of its Irish stores in February.
Let’s take a look around.
Got some spare millions lying around? Worried about looking flashing if you buy a gaff in Ireland? Never fear.
The house, owned by the president of the Italian fashion house Versace, was built in the early 1950s and is considered an important architectural achievement.
Even as they crumble, these ruined stately homes still portray decadence in photographs of Thomas Jorion.
Breaking via The Mire wire: Roscommon man jumps for space to advertise his CV; the Prophet Seán Quinn; Enda having fun in Brussels.
Have you a spare $13 million?
20 Abington has been on the market for some time – but has now been the subject of rival bids from two couples.
The social network is paving the way for a major staff expansion.