Prominent Foxrock village site sells swiftly for €1.8m

Rockbrae sits next to a smaller Westminster Road site now home to eight townhouses

Rockbrae: the 180sq m (1,935sq ft) home stands on a 0.77ac (0.31ha) site
Rockbrae: the 180sq m (1,935sq ft) home stands on a 0.77ac (0.31ha) site

One interesting sale this week will be closely watched by Foxrock locals to see what happens next. Rockbrae, a 180sq m (1,935sq ft) home on Westminster Road, Dublin 18, came to the market in early December – not always an optimal time to put a house up for sale – and sold this week for about €1.8 million.

The swift private-treaty sale, through the online auction platform BidX1, was conducted in the middle of the latest Covid-19 lockdown, but it seems plenty of interested buyers still lined up. Not surprising, really, given the clear attraction of Rockbrae: it occupies a substantial, 0.77ac (0.31ha) site in the heart of Foxrock village and falls under the Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown development plan for 2016-22.

Rockbrae: the final buyer did not visit the property, instead viewing it only virtually
Rockbrae: the final buyer did not visit the property, instead viewing it only virtually
Rockbrae: the home’s substantial site is in the heart of Foxrock village, Dublin 18
Rockbrae: the home’s substantial site is in the heart of Foxrock village, Dublin 18

Just next door, Greencroft Construction is building eight new townhouses on a site that sold in 2016 for €2 million. At 0.6ac (0.24ha), it is smaller than Rockbrae’s. And it is just one of a number of former residential sites in the area being redeveloped for new homes.

BidX1 says more than 20 interested buyers downloaded the legal documents for Rockbrae, which was an institutional sale. The final buyer did not visit the property, instead viewing it only virtually. The transaction was completed via BidX1’s online “deal room”, with unconditional digital contracts exchanged on Tuesday.

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The buyer is understood to have purchased Rockbrae to add to an existing property portfolio, but it’s not apparent if there are immediate plans to proceed with its development. The fate of the prominent site is likely to be closely observed.

Madeleine Lyons

Madeleine Lyons

Madeleine Lyons is Food & Drink Editor of The Irish Times