Business

Report homes in on ‘alarming drop’ in housing starts across north

Wastewater capacity constraints taking toll on residential development says CIS

Housing Minister Darragh O’Brien vowed to examined the report
A new report from the CIS reveals that during the first half of 2024, only 1,577 new homes were started in Northern Ireland, which represents just 27% of last year’s total housing output (Gareth Fuller/PA)

There are no signs of an end to Northern Ireland’s acute housing crisis, with a new report showing significant declines in the numbers of year-on-year planning permission submissions, approvals and project commencements across the region.

A survey by the Construction Employers Federation earlier this year home-builders claimed that wastewater capacity constraints in the north are holding up 8,450 homes, equating to nearly £1 billion of investment.

When the proposals of housing associations and other developers are factored, in this brings the total of homes unable to proceed to approximately 19,000.

And those CEF claims are supported by a new report from Construction Information Services (CIS), which reveals that during the first half of 2024, only 1,577 new homes were started in Northern Ireland. That represents just 27% of last year’s total housing output.

In terms of new investment, last year Northern Ireland saw 99 new housing projects start, comprising 6,408 new homes.



At the halfway point of 2024, 46 new housing developments have got under way, but the 1,693 homes they represent account for only 26% of 2023′s figures.

The report indicates an even bleaker situation for apartment units, where new investment in 2023 led to 2,100 apartment units getting under way, whereas projects started in 2024 have resulted in only 381 units so far.

Indeed for every single new apartment built in Northern Ireland, over 11 are completed in the Republic (based on a four-year average)

CIS commercial director Dave Thompson said: “NI Water, the public body that maintains our water supply and infrastructure, has said that limits to its funding mean that it can’t provide the infrastructure to support housing developments.

“We can see the impact that these issues are having already in 2024, with significant reductions in housing activity apart from student accommodation, with 765 student beds under construction and another 499 approved.

“While planning approvals in 2024 hint at potential overall recovery, with 218 residential projects totalling 3,334 units approved, it remains uncertain how many of these will commence construction this year”, he added.

There are no signs of an end to Northern Ireland’s acute housing crisis, with a new report showing significant declines in the numbers of year-on-year planning permission submissions, approvals and project commencements across the region
CIS commercial director Dave Thompson

Noteworthy residential projects granted planning permission in the first half of this year include a mixed social/affordable development comprising 126 units in Ballymoney and a 205-unit residential apartment development in Belfast by Artemis Developments Limited. Meanwhile, an appeal is under way for a 354-bed student accommodation scheme on the same site.

The new CIS Insights’ report shows a growing trend towards repurposing office spaces for student housing, exemplified by the redevelopment of the former Movie House site on Belfast’s Dublin Road by Queen’s University.

CIS has been providing verified, and real-time insight and intelligence on the Irish construction sector for more than 50 years, with its services used by blue chip brands in the private and public sectors across the island.