The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Shetland author’s joy as observator­y is promised £2m to rebuild after blaze

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com

Shetland author Ann Cleeves is thrilled that Fair Isle Bird Observator­y is to be rebuilt after it was destroyed by fire two years ago.

It was revealed last week that the Scottish Government and Highlands & Islands Enterprise will provide £2.35 million towards the £7.4m cost of creating a new research centre on the island, between Shetland and Orkney.

Cleeves is patron of the internatio­nally renowned observator­y trust, which attracted visitors from around the world prior to the 2019 blaze, and she has been part of the fundraisin­g efforts to re-establish the centre.

The bestsellin­g writer, who also created Vera, first travelled to Fair Isle 46 years ago to take up a job at the observator­y, which has recorded 388 bird species since it opened in 1948.

She met her late husband, Tim, on that first trip and he proposed to her there the following summer. Cleeves remains a frequent visitor to Fair Isle, which is home to puffin colonies, and it inspired one of her most famous series of novels. “I’m absolutely delighted that Fair Isle Bird Observator­y Trust has achieved the funding it needs,” she told The Sunday Post.

“I know the contractor­s have been in to the Isle to meet the locals and to check out the site. I understand they have already experience­d some of the weather that will make this project such a challenge!

“The government funding has made a huge difference to the speed of the build but I’d like to thank all the individual­s who have donated too. I’m continuing my fundraisin­g – the observator­y will still need support even once the building is complete.

“And if you’d like to help, and you would like a quick virtual visit to the islands before the new series of Shetland appears on our screens, I’m donating all royalties from the novel Blue Lightning to the trust.”

The ambitious project is led by Fair Isle Bird Observator­y Trust and is designed by Inverness-based Colin Armstrong Architects.

While the building will mostly be constructe­d off-site, it is hoped work on the island could get under way next summer, subject to planning consent, and the new observator­y could welcome its first visitors in 2023.

 ?? ?? An Atlantic puffin
An Atlantic puffin
 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of new observator­y
An artist’s impression of new observator­y
 ?? ?? Ann Cleeves
Ann Cleeves

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