The Scotsman

Area Focus: Shetland Isles

Sarah Devine investigat­es how much you would need to pony up to buy a home on Shetland

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Shetland has recently been voted the second-best Scottish island to live on by respondent­s of a Which? Survey – beaten only by Orkney – and surpassing some 800 others around the country, thanks to its five-star offering of peace and quiet.

The historic archipelag­o was awarded a customer score of 86 per cent by the consumer magazine, and received four out of five stars for travel, scenery, tourist attraction­s, shopping and value for money.

Homes in Shetland are more affordable than in many other rural and coastal parts of mainland Scotland, with an average price of £168,768 paid for a property there over the last 12 months.

The scenic destinatio­n – recently in the spotlight as the location for Ann Cleaves’ eponymous crime novel, adapted for television by the BBC – is increasing in popularity among homebuyers. This is evidenced by rising house prices, up 8 per cent on 2020 and ahead 2 per cent based on the islands’ 2018 peak.

About 100 islands make up the Shetlands, 16 of which are inhabited, situated 106 miles north of Scotland’s mainland and 217 miles west of Bergen in Norway.

The Shetland Islands were the first part of Scotland to be discovered by Norsemen when they first crossed the North Sea in the 8th Century, before ruling over this portion of the country for the next 600 years.

Lerwick, the islands’ only – and Britain’s most northerly – town has a population of about 7,500 and a name which stems from the Old Norse meaning for “muddy” or “clay bay”. Its street names, such as St Sunniva Street and King Haakon Street, are reminders of the historic bond between Shetland and Scandinavi­a.

Lerwick dates back to the 17th Century and was a seaport for trading herring. However, the smuggling of alcohol and tobacco through secret tunnels under the town’s Commercial Street led to a surge in drunken and unruly behaviour.

Disapprovi­ng residents from nearby Scalloway, Shetland’s main seat of power until 1708, took drastic action by burning down the wooden settlement in 1625.

These days, thankfully, Shetland’s capital is famous for its annual celebratio­ns, including Up Helly Aa, and is a hive of boating activity during the summer months.

The Town Hall, built in 1883, marks the New Town, an area of Lerwick comprising large Edwardian villas and green spaces, built in the 19th Century to replace overcrowde­d lanes. Today, it boasts large detached and semi-detached villas with spacious gardens.

Addresses in the New Town Conservati­on Area include King Harald Street, where properties have an average value of £256,573, according to Zoopla, and the leafy St Olaf Street, where homes are valued at an average of £239,774.

Shops and schools are within walking distance from almost anywhere in the town, and there are daily ferries to Aberdeen and Kirkwall in Orkney.

Sumburgh Airport is a half-hour drive to the south of Sheltand’s mainland and operates regular flights between Kirkwall, Aberdeen, Glasgow and Edinburgh.

For those seeking a quieter setting, the sleepy island of Bressay has a scattering of houses and is home to just some 360 residents.

Ferries to Bressay depart from Lerwick’s Albert Buildings regularly, and the island has a post office, shop and a pub as well as a wealth of wildlife.

Further north is the island of Yell, a vast moorland home for grazing sheep, while the UK’S most northerly island, Unst, sits above.

Indeed, Unst is remote and potential homebuyers should register their interest with Shetlandba­sed estate agents Dowle Smith & Rutherford, who can give you a shout when Yell properties come to market.

Throughout Shetland there is a welcoming and close-knit community, and next to no crime. With such a northerly propositio­n, the islands also benefit from up to 19 hours of sunlight a day in the summer – it is clear to see the appeal of a post-pandemic new start in a safe Shetland setting.

“Its street names, such as St Sunniva Street and King Haakon Street, are reminders of the historic bond between Shetland and Scandinavi­a”

 ??  ?? Lerwick’s quaint Commercial Street,
its secret undergroun­d tunnels for contraband not pictured. Top right, an aerial view of the town gives a sense of the settlement’s scale.
Pictures: Shuttersto­ck, Visitscotl­and / Stuart Brunton
Lerwick’s quaint Commercial Street, its secret undergroun­d tunnels for contraband not pictured. Top right, an aerial view of the town gives a sense of the settlement’s scale. Pictures: Shuttersto­ck, Visitscotl­and / Stuart Brunton
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