Ronan retained substantial assets outside of Treasury Holdings and in April 2015 these were refinanced in a €300 million deal with backing from
Colony Capital,
M&G Investments, and
Deutsche Bank. Ronan repaid his debts at par and exited NAMA. The refinancing for the deal was secured on RGRE's portfolio of 24 assets in Dublin - including three
Grafton Street retail properties, the Treasury Building, a number of other buildings in Dublin 2, Kilmore House in
Spencer Dock, and Connaught House in Burlington Road. RGRE was soon involved in notable ventures with a combined worth of more than €1bn including restarting the planning phase of the mothballed 23-storey
Aqua Vetro skyscraper adjoining Tara Street station in Dublin. Other projects include the €150m Vertium office building on Dublin's Burlington Road and a €350m Facebook office campus in
Ballsbridge on what was previously the head office of AIB. RGRE also signed off on a €600m deal to develop Spencer Place, on Dublin's North Docks which will be Dublin's biggest property development since 2008 and will be adjacent to Treasury Holding's earlier
Spencer Dock development. In 2021, RGRE submitted a planning application to build a 155-metre, 45-story building in Dublin's north docklands. This would be almost twice the height of Capital Dock, and more than twice the number of stories as
Capital Dock, Dublin's current tallest building.
Waterfront South Central In October 2018, Ronan Group Real Estate and Colony Capital formed a
joint venture to acquire a 4.6-acre site in the Dublin's north docklands for in excess of €180m, being held by the
National Asset Management Agency. The site had planning permission for the development of four office buildings ranging in height from six to eight storeys, comprising c. 300,000 sq. ft. of net office space, and two residential buildings of six and eleven storeys comprising 420 apartments. Following the commencement of construction on the site in 2019, Ronan Group twice sought planning permission from
Dublin City Council to increase the height on the property from nine to eleven storeys, however this was rejected. This was followed by a third planning application to increase the height of the property from nine to thirteen storeys, however this was again rejected by
Dublin City Council. Despite this, the design was awarded the title of the "greenest"
Salesforce Tower in the world. In July 2020, Colony Capital appointed Eastdil Secured to dispose of its interests in Waterfront South Central and the separate, fellow Ronan Group development Fibonacci Square. In 2021, Colony Capital now rebranded as
DigitalBridge, entered into an agreement to dispose of €2.7bn of non-digital assets to private equity firm
Fortress Investment Group, which included the 70% interest held in the Waterfront South Central joint venture. This resulted in Ronan Group obtaining a High Court injunction against DigitalBridge in October 2021 to prevent the sale of its stakes the above-mentioned schemes to Fortress Investment Group. The injunction was then resolved in November 2021, with the interests in the joint venture being acquired by US private equity firm
Blackstone in July 2022 for €500m. ==References==