Limerick Council pays €36m to landowners as part of CPO for €450m road scheme that includes €150m Adare bypass

Stock photo.
Advertisement

LIMERICK City and County Council has to date paid out €36.03million to landowners as part of the Compulsory Purchase Order (CPO) of lands on the route of a new road scheme in County Limerick that includes the €150m Adare bypass project.

Work is continuing on the Adare bypass, with the Council confirming the project “is progressing steadily and remains firmly on programme for completion in June 2027”, ahead of the Ryder Cup next September.

The Adare bypass is part of the larger €450m 35km Foynes to Limerick Road scheme from the N69 at Shannon-Foynes Port to the existing N21/M20 at Patrickswell to the east of Adare via the towns of Askeaton and Rathkeale.

An Coimisiún Pleanala approved the Foynes to Limerick Road – including Adare Bypass – in August 2022 and work finally commenced on the Adare bypass aspect of the overall scheme in January 2025 in order to end the daily grid-lock in the west Limerick village in time for the Ryder Cup.

Advertisement

The total extent of land acquired through the CPO for the overall scheme totals almost 1,000 acres and the route impacts up to 200 landholdings, including 105 farms.

During the CPO process for the overall proposal, 122 objections were made from affected landowners and, at the time of finalising ACP inspector’s report, 34 objections from 29 parties remained.

In response to a Freedom of Information request, the Council confirmed that €36.03m has been paid out to date to landowners as part of the approved CPO process for the Foynes to Limerick Road (including Adare Bypass) scheme.

However, the Council refused to release further details of payments to landowners, including how many landowners have received payments and the aggregate acreage that has been purchased, saying: “This information is being refused as to release the number of landowners and the amount paid out to date has the potential to impact negatively on the remaining cases, and the amount of compensation yet to be paid on average per landowner and per acre.”

The Council also refused to release the number of payments made to landowners in certain bands, as the FOI unit concluded “as to release the number of payments made under each band would disclose personal information of an identifiable individual.”

As part of a 506 page report, the ACP inspector in the case found that the CPO would result in the acquisition/demolition of nine homes, including two that are not inhabited and the property owners “would suffer profound to significant residual impacts”.

The inspector cited the example of one couple who would lose their family home of 20 years and chose to live at the location close to the River Maigue, because of their deep connection with nature and for medical and other reasons