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State Properties

Dáil Éireann Debate, Tuesday - 27 June 2023

Tuesday, 27 June 2023

Questions (251)

Catherine Murphy

Question:

251. Deputy Catherine Murphy asked the Minister for Public Expenditure, National Development Plan Delivery and Reform the amount per year invested in Castletown House since the OPW took ownership to date in 2023; and if he will provide a schedule of works, restorations, installations and projects carried out over that timeframe. [31222/23]

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Written answers

Castletown House is an eighteenth-century neo-Palladian country house built within an extensive estate. Numbers using the estate have increased greatly since the OPW took over the estate and now stand at over one million visitors to the estate each year.

In 1994, the Office of Public Works took responsibility for Castletown House and estate. Initially, this was only 13 acres of land with the house. It has long been the policy of the OPW to seek to reunite the historic Castletown estate. In 1997, one hundred acres south of the house was acquired. The farmyard adjacent to the house was acquired in 2001. In 2006, lands associated with the Batty Lodge were acquired with former Coillte lands to the north and east of the House acquired in 2007. Since 2008, the OPW has reassembled 227 acres of the original 580 acres of land which formed the historic demesne.

Much of the original demesne lands acquired over the years were in poor condition. The OPW has worked to open up the lands and to restore many of the landscape features, particularly the historic network of pathways across the estate and the vista towards the Conolly Folly. Work is ongoing on the opening up to the public of the Crodaun Woods.

The restoration of the historic pathways began in 2007. There has also been a concerted effort to manage the Estate for biodiversity. The landscape by the Office of Public works are an exemplar site for the All Ireland Pollinator Plan with some grasslands of Annex 1 quality under the EU Habitats Directive. Extensive pollinator surveys have been conducted which have identified a large number of bumblebee, butterfly, hoverfly, and solitary bee species. Other studies have recorded a high diversity of tree, bird, and other invertebrate species. The landscape is of high value to grassland plants regionally due to the increasingly urban nature of the surrounding landscape.

In 2007, the Office of Public Works worked with the owner of the adjacent lands to develop an entrance and carpark from the M4 slipway. This removed traffic from the environs of the house.

While Castletown House was taken over by the State in 1994, it has only been managed by the Office of Public Works since 2006. Therefore, it is not possible to provide accurate figures in full of all State investment between 1994 and 2006.

The total expenditure by the Office of Public Works, including current and capital expenditure, between 1994 and 2006 was €4,170, 935.75. However, this does not cover expenditure from Dúchas or the Department of Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht and the Islands.

Please find attached the details of the costs of property acquisitions and the annual expenditure on Castletown House from 2006 to 2023 (year to date).

Expenditure on projects at Castletown

Year

Project

Amount

2006

Fencing

15,880.04

2008

Fencing

27,321.47

2010

Lead work on roof

62,986.32

2011

Paths upgrade

64,226.32

2012

Paths upgrade

276,640.30

2013

Paths upgrade

59,590.01

Annual expenditure on Castletown to 2023

Year

Current expenditure

Capital expenditure

Description for capital expenditure

2006

950,701.97

550,850.67

House refurbishment

2007

608,952.19

1,489,508.88

House Refurbishment Gate lodges

2008

516,249,.82

974,800.89

House refurbishment Gate lodges

2009

575,922.00

521,009.14

House refurbishment Gate lodges Batty Langley wall

2010

759,311.43

241,130.11

Lands works Batty Langley

2011

755,956.29

119,736.90

Fire sealing House, lands works

2012

886,616.39

117,801.01

House refurbishment Fire sealing House, lands works

2013

1,008,016.39

11,710.00

Farmyard

2014

808,517.69

44,070.65

West Wing roof

2015

1,451,959.67

81,693.68

Cowshed

2016

1,400,582.81

169,740.66

Farmyard Pleasure garden House refurbishment

2017

1,643,349.87

262,865.50

Farmyard

2018

1,846,296.41

87,431.68

Farmyard

2019

1,703,455.92

37,249.47

Lands works Batty Langley Farmyard

2020

1,508,893.42

38,367.06

Batty Langley Farmyard

2021

1,648,945.91

100,084.22

Batty Langley Farmyard

2022

1,717,905.44

172,578.26

House refurbishment Batty Langley Farmyard

2023

601,302.87

65,045.23

House refurbishment Batty Langley Site maintenance

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