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Farmleigh House is the State's official guesthouse which the OPW has spent over €50m on in the past 14 years. Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland
Brian Hayes

The OPW is going to take an inventory of everything owned by the State

Minister of State Brian Hayes hopes to have details on every building, every piece of land and every table and chair owned by the State to be online by the beginning of next year.

THE OFFICE OF Public Works (OPW) plans to take an inventory of every building and every item it owns in order to make it available for the public to view online from early next year.

Minister of State at the OPW, Brian Hayes, has told TheJournal.ie that the government will be putting in place new protocols to allow for a stock take of everything from buildings to furniture to have an inventory of what assets the Irish people own.

“[We'll be] making sure that we have published – by the first quarter of next year – an inventory of exactly of who owns what and where, what is its square footage, what is its thermal efficiency,” he said.

Hayes said this would ensure a “whole of government approach to all of the assets that belong to the Irish people”.

A further announcement on the initiative is expected this week.

The Minister said that such an inventory was important for the purposes of ensuring that if local authorities or public agencies are searching for new accommodation they can examine what land or buildings are available from the OPW.

“I think that’s going to be a huge, huge improvement from the current position,” he said.

The Fine Gael TD also said that he hoped to get the State’s current bill for the rental of buildings down to under €100 million next year having brought it down to €108 million this year from a previous high of €138 million three years ago.

In a wide-ranging interview, the Minister also explained what the government is doing with the 137 garda stations that have been closed over the last two years and defended the State’s ownership of Farmleigh House:

YouTube: Thejournalvideo

- camera and editing by Michelle Hennessy and Nicky Ryan

Read: Just 11 heads of state have stayed in Farmleigh in four and a half years

Read: The government owns 203 empty buildings

Read: State has ‘saved €5.3m’ on rent in 2012

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