Area focus: Stornoway
The annual four-day-long international Hebridean Celtic Festival, or HebCelt, kicked off yesterday, and is presenting a hybrid of live and digital performances dubbed the âSurvival Sessionsâ.
A limited audience at the Stornoway arts centre, An Lanntair, can watch performances by Saltfishforty, Colin Macleod and Staran, among others, while32 hoursâ of pre-recordings, the streaming of commissions and workshops, with an exclusive special from the Red Hot Chilli Pipers, will also be available.
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Hide AdAnd there is no better place for such a celebration, as Stornoway is considered by many as a creative hub for the arts and the islandâs Gaelic heritage.
The Isle of Lewis forms the northern half of Lewis and Harris, and Stornoway, on the east coast, is by far its biggest town with a population of some 5,000.
The settlement was founded on a natural harbour in the 9th Century by the Vikings, who named it StjĂłrnavĂĄgr, which is Old Norse for âsteering bayâ.
They controlled the island until the 1200s, but conflict among Scotlandâs clans was rife here throughout the Middle Ages.
During the 16th Century, the island was ruled over by the MacLeods, who fought off King James VIâs âFife Adventurersâ who had been dispatched to remove Gaelic-speaking inhabitants. Unsuccessful in this goal, the Adventurers gave up after three attempts.
By the mid-1800s, Stornoway had developed a thriving fishing industry and was famed for its herring. The townâs harbour became a major centre for ship building, and up to 6,000 fishermen worked through the port.
Today, Stornowayâs harbour is much smaller, but still retains a fishing fleet. It also has a marina for pleasure boats and a small shipyard.
In recent years, the townâs economy has come to depend on fishing, farming, the oil industry, and tourism.
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Hide AdWhile the Isle of Lewis is a popular destination in the summer, those who can thrive in its remote wilderness during the rest of the year will benefit from attractive property prices.
According to Zoopla, a property in Stornoway costs an average of ÂŁ129,344, and it reveals that Goathill Crescent is the most sought-after address in the Western Isles, with an average property value of ÂŁ311,529.
This leafy crescent and surrounding streets in the town centre feature magnificent Victorian villas and large houses with admirable Art Deco touches.
Lewis Street is the second-highest valued thoroughfare, with a mix of property types including flats, detached bungalows and townhouses, averaging at ÂŁ277,532.
Along the shoreline there are many colourful stone Victorian townhouses and Bayhead Street, going into Cromwell Street, whose namesake destroyed Stornoway Castle in 1653, forms the main shopping area. The properties there now comprise retail and flats, priced on average at ÂŁ108,073.
In the north of the town is Willowglen Road, which has a number of semi-detached family-style dwellings, featuring gardens and driveways, as well as larger individually-designed detached homes, all of which overlook the course at Stornoway Golf Club.
Maybury Gardens, east of the town, has a range of bungalows and detached cottages with plenty of space between each one.
The Point peninsula is about four miles east of Stornoway and has a scattering of houses and cottages across its grassy expanse.
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Hide AdBroker, in the north of the peninsula, has a number of idyllic white-washed cottages and houses with spectacular coastal views.
Dotted around the island are a variety of remote crofts and large farmhouses, offering more self-sufficient lifestyles. Indeed, if a secluded, tranquil retreat is what you are seeking, a home on the Isle of Lewis can offer just that.