Car parking at Dublin Airport is big business, so why has the sale of the unused QuickPark facility stalled?

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Dublin-Airport-Authority Nouvelles

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Many parties are interested in buying. But the longer the stalemate persists, the greater the likelihood of bidders drifting away

The former QuickPark car park beside Dublin Airport. It has 6,122 long-stay parking spaces but a sale process for the facility, owned by property developer Gerry Gannon, has stalledHe told the Oireachtas committee on transport that it was not “that big of a drama”, that people were booking early and thus securing parking, and that a third of all passengers came by public transport anyway.

It puts a severe crimp on the airport’s ambitions to grow its revenues, even with more people getting to the airport by public transport.’s currently unused car park on the Swords Road – the former QuickPark site – which has almost accidentally become a piece of vital infrastructure for the airport. In the original sales prospectus, the attractiveness of the asset was obvious – it was the only privately-owned car park close to the airport, with 22 per cent of all long-term parking capacity. With no further car parks permitted under airport planning conditions, it was an alluring investment.

It piqued the interest of a great many bidders, who clearly saw the €70 million guide price as value for money. “Driving non-aero revenue for us means selling more car parking spaces, lounges, fast-track, duty free products, foods and beverages and everything else we can sell to passengers at Dublin and Cork,” he said.

DAA’s bid for QuickPark was successful, with a deal announced in the autumn of 2022. However, the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission , the state’s competition watchdog, quickly moved in to investigate. The significance of such a vacuum is more than just the effect on the ability of a number of wealthy investors to buy a lucrative asset, it’s about the availability of parking for Dublin Airport users, and the existence of a healthy price competition at peak times.

“I do not think that process will go forward now. I understand the vendor withdrew because it may not be able to let us do it,” he told the Oireachtas committee.

 

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