News and Events
- Professor Mark Scott elected to Fellowship of Academy of Social Sciences
- Professor Finola O'Kane appointed as a Senior Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks
- Gerd Albers Award 2023 – Best article
- Prof Eoin O’Neill announced as new Director of the UCD Earth Institute
- Professor Mark Scott appointed to Board of the Heritage Council
- Streetlife Design Competition: special mention for landscape graduates
- Prof Francesco Pilla launches new bike libraries for Dublin primary schools
- Peter Cody and Mary Laheen are part of a team representing Ireland at La Biennale di Venezia
- The growing research impact of APEP; a global leader in UCD
- Cathal O'Neill Obituary
- Foreign Exchange Book Launch
- Home retrofits may need to be re-done in ten years, Oireachtas committee hears
- Visiting Professor announcement
- Documenting Maritime Cultural Heritage
- Assessing Flood Risk Awareness Contributes to Environmental Policy Formation
- Supporting Climate Action Through Tree Planting recognised in UCD Research Impact Competition
- Two Student Winners in the GLDA Student & Graduate Design Competition 2022
- Empowering People to Address the Problems of Climate Change
- Building Climate Action Locally: Tools from the CCAT Project
- 2021 Archive
- 2020 Archive
- 2019 Archive
- Eight UCD schools win Athena SWAN awards for gender equality commitment
- Environmental Policy Researchers wins prestigious award
- Planning and Real Estate Concise Guides to Planning By Brendan Williams
- Landscape Architecture successful in Interreg bid
- Concrete Solutions for Sustainability in Buildings
- Timber and Harbours: Insights into Sustainability in Design and Construction
- Bloom 2019: A real taste of Ireland
- Planning & Environmental Policy Society win the 'Society Publication of the Year Award’
- Ministers announce the nomination of Professor Peter Clinch as Chairperson Designate of the Board of Science Foundation Ireland
- Environmental scientist Dr Cara Augustenborg appointed to Council of State
- Construction is a cause of global warming, but is concrete really the problem?
- Impress - Design Workshop
- A Living Lab Approach for more Sustainable Cities
- In Memoriam Kevin Roche: 1922 - 2019
- Irish star Sheila O’Donnell wins WIA Architect of the Year 2019
- Professor Sheila O’Donnell becomes first Irish architect inducted into American Academy of Arts and Letters
- Planning and Environmental Policy Careers Day 2019
- UCD Professor of Planning, Mark Scott, launches a major new book on rural planning
- UCD academics named as two of Ireland’s five new Cultural Ambassadors
- 2018 Archive
- 2017 Archive
- 2016 Archive
UCD Environmental Policy Researchers wins prestigious international award from American Planning Association
Monday, 11 November, 2019
Eoin O’Neill, Associate Professor of Environmental Policy receiving the Award at the 2019 JAPA Annual Award Ceremony in Greenville, South Carolina. L to R: Deborah Lawlor (President, American Institute of Certified Planners); Kurt Christiansen, (President, American Planning Association); Eoin O’Neill (Head of School, APEP); Ann Forsyth (JAPA Editor)
A University College Dublin study tackling the financial costs of using a market-based approach to land preservation has picked up another top international prize.
The associate editors of the Journal of the American Planning Association selected the paper "Estimates of Transaction Costs in Transfer of Development Rights Programs" by Sina Shahab, Peter Clinch and Eoin O'Neill, published in JAPA in 2018, as the (opens in a new window)paper of the year.
Associate Professor Eoin O’Neill accepted the prestigious award on behalf of the authors from the American Planning Association last week at a ceremony in Greenville, South Carolina. This award comes on top of the Royal Town Planning Institute Research Excellence Award gained for the same paper last year.
Examining the transaction costs associated with Transfer of Development Rights (TDR) programs in the United States, the paper found that such schemes were hampered by a lack of information for buyers and sellers, thus thwarting the goal of land preservation.
Transfer of development rights programs have been implemented as a market-based approach to preserving farmlands and open space while redirecting future development to targeted areas.
Widespread in the USA, these schemes are often cited as superior to traditional preservation instruments, such as zoning, because their benefits are not confined to those lucky enough to have their land zoned for development.
They found that, excluding the initial public-sector costs of establishing the programs, total transaction costs ranged from 13 percent to 21 percent of total TDR costs per transaction and were largely borne by the private sector.
The (opens in a new window)UCD study concluded that planners can work to reduce transaction costs by better constructing TDR programs and providing greater information on TDR sale prices and potential buyers and sellers.