Engagement
Commission an intelligence report.
For developers, agents, funds, and solicitors acting on Irish sites. Describe the site and the decision it bears on — scope and pricing confirmed before any work begins.
Reply within 48 hours · No commitment until scope agreed
Prefer email? Write directly to hello@archa.ie
Before you brief us
What commissioning a report looks like.
A bespoke written analysis of an Irish site or portfolio. Archa joins every public register that touches an Irish site — planning applications and decisions, ownership and company records, zoning and land tax status, building control, sales, ecological and heritage designations, flood and subsidence data, and the full text of planning documents — into one sourced picture. You get an answer that would take a researcher weeks to assemble manually, sourced back to the original document.
Developers, acquirers, agents, solicitors, funds, and family offices acting on Irish sites. Most briefs cluster around one of four moments: pre-acquisition due diligence, pre-planning strategy, response to a refusal, or portfolio-level review.
Most commissions are delivered in days, not weeks. The timeline is confirmed in writing before any work begins, as part of the scope.
Each commission is priced as a fixed-scope engagement, quoted in euro before work begins. Pricing reflects the depth of the question and the size of the site or portfolio. There is no commitment until you accept the scope and price.
A written report with every claim sourced to a specific document or register, supporting data tables, and — where useful — spatial visualisations. You receive it as a standalone deliverable to use for the decision it was commissioned for.
Yes — any piece of land in Ireland, whether it has a planning history or not. Archa generates a spatial profile for every Irish coordinate, joining zoning and land tax status, ownership, environmental and ecological overlays, flood and subsidence, heritage and monuments, and any planning activity on or near the site. Sites with existing planning records produce deeper reports because there is more document-level evidence to draw on.
Yes. Every layer is drawn from an Irish public register or licensed public-sector source — Local Authority planning registers (CC-BY 4.0), An Bord Pleanála, Tailte Éireann (Land Registry and Property Services Regulatory Authority), the Companies Registration Office, Ordnance Survey Ireland, the Central Statistics Office, the Environmental Protection Agency, and similar bodies. Reports preserve attribution to the originating authority, and planning documents remain hosted by the Local Authority under their terms of use. Note that planning records may contain personal data — when you reuse material from a report, you are the controller and responsible for your own GDPR compliance.