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Bay of Spices Press



press five
 Albania: A Land of Beauty and Bargains

International Herald Tribune, Dec 04, 2006

TIRANA, Albania: Not long ago, to suggest Albania as a destination of any kind, even a frugal one, would have been the height of chutzpah. Within five years of Albania's abandoning communism in 1992, a Ponzi scheme destroyed the nascent market economy and widespread rioting turned Albania into a byword for rampant lawlessness. It was not, except for aid workers and smugglers, on anyone's map.

In the last several years, however, Albania has made enormous strides in democracy and development — and revealed itself to be not only ripe for tourists, but affordable to boot. The capital, Tirana, with its brightly painted apartment buildings and Italian cafe culture, is a fantastic starting point, especially since it's hard to spend more than $15, or about €11, a person at the city's nicest restaurants. But it's the southern part of this Balkan country that holds the most intriguing sights and bargains.

Start in Gjirokaster, a beautifully warped city that produced two of Albania's most important 20th-century figures: Enver Hoxha, the country's dictator for 40 years after World War II, and Ismail Kadare, the novelist perennially mentioned as a Nobel Prize candidate.

Gjirokaster is built on slippery, cobble stoned hills so steep they seem to defy human habitation, yet the town of stately slate-roofed Ottoman houses bustles.

One house, now the Ethnographic Museum, happens to be Hoxha's birthplace. Another is the Hotel Kalemi (355-84- 63-724; hotelkalemi.tripod.com), where for $40 a night you can sleep under a carved wood ceiling that is 200 years old.

During the day, your legs will get a workout wandering the streets and exploring the massive fortress overlooking the city. At night, recuperate with roast tongue of veal and yogurt soup at the friendly Festival restaurant. And don't leave Gjirokaster without a handmade carpet from Ruha's shop (355-69-254-2122); they start at $40.

Your reward for enduring Gjirokaster's hills is Sarande, a busy port on the Strait of Otranto. At the Hotel Kaonia (355-85-22-600), right on the boardwalk, a simple but modern double room with great water views runs at about $40.

The pebbly beach in the center of Sarande may not be too exciting, but there are white sand stretches nearby, including the popular beach at Ksamili, 16 kilometers, or about 10 miles, to the south. And if you're hankering for a taste of classical Europe, the Greek island of Corfu is a quick hydrofoil ride away.

Southern Albania's greatest treasure, however, is Butrint, a 2,500-year-old city that was inhabited by successive generations of Illyrians, Greeks, Epireans, Romans, Byzantines and Venetians before dwindling to a tiny fishing village in the late 19th century. It's the kind of place where history is still waiting to be discovered.

Situated on a hilly, forest-shrouded promontory south of Sarande, near the Greek border, Butrint (a Unesco World Heritage Site) was first excavated by Italians in the 1920s, who unearthed an amphitheater and Greek-built walls. Archaeologists later discovered early Christian basilicas, a baptistery and as many as eight bathhouses.

Butrint is large — about 11 square miles or 28 square kilometers — and still shrouded in mystery, so you'll want a guide. Vasil Barka (355-69-227-6460) has 25 years of experience and knows where to find Cleopatra's name in a string of Greek letters on a huge stone block outside the amphitheater.

In the basilica, where the frescoed floor is covered in sand to protect the tiles from the elements, Barka knows just where to brush aside the grains to reveal a spectacular red-and-blue bird.

And at the Venetian fort-turned-museum, he can tell you which statues have just been dug up and which recovered from looters.

Afterward, head to the nearby Livia Hotel (355-891- 2040) for a feast of mussels, shrimp, eel and squid.

Like Albania itself, this lost city harbors untold treasures and at a price that just about anyone can afford.

 

 

Last Updated on Monday, 23 November 2009 15:32
 
pressfour
  Europe's Last Frontier

Times, April 19, 2007

Loud bangs ring across the Albanian sky: first one, then another, then a loud rata-tat. Dogs bark. I contemplate seeking refuge under the bed. A repeat of the orgy of shooting that followed the collapse of a financial pyramid scheme a decade ago, in which most of the population lost their savings and at least 1,000 people lost their lives? Or maybe an example of that great local tradition, the blood feud, in which a single killing sets off an infinite chain of tit-for-tat retribution?

Wrong and twice wrong. When I open the shutters on the window of my comfortable seafront hotel in Vlore, halfway down the coast, the sky is full of spectacular fireworks. August is high wedding season: seven days of festivities typically end with thousands of pounds of explosives going up in smoke.

To say Albania has an image problem is something of an understatement. Run for more than 40 years by a Stalinist regime so hard line, it dismissed the Soviets as a bunch of capitalist lackeys, this Balkan nation of 3.6m people tucked between Greece and Montenegro has an impoverished population, diabolical infrastructure and some of the scariest drivers this side of Beirut. Oh, and Albanian emigres are said to have their fingers in some of the sleaziest parts of the London underworld.

Yet the country also has a balmy southern Mediterranean climate, mile after mile of undeveloped beaches and crystal-clear water, and some of the lowest house prices in Europe: in short, everything to give it the potential to become the next stop on the itinerary of the intrepid British property investor.

“If you can imagine Greece in the late 1950s or the 1960s, or simply without the cement, that’s Albania,” says Philip Bay, who heads the southeastern European operations of the property consultant Colliers. “I think Albania is going to be a hybrid of Bulgaria, Croatia and Montenegro, for the simple reason that it is a sort of last frontier in Europe. When Albania is finished, there is nothing left in Europe as far as the second-home market is concerned. When it’s done, those buying second homes will have to go to Morocco, Tunisia and maybe Libya.”

So, how intrepid do you have to be to buy in Albania? Not quite as much as you might think. While the country continues to be dogged by its mafia image – and organized crime and corruption remain a problem – the guns have long since gone (or at least been put away), the political system is stable and the government has embarked on an economic reform program (including a flat tax on income and profits, now 20% and due to drop to 10% next year) – all of which, it hopes, should allow it to join the European Union in about 2014.

On a warm summer’s day, it is pleasant to sip coffee at one of the pavement cafes in the Block – a smart area of the capital, Tirana, once reserved for the communist fat cats – or in the park opposite the white marble pyramid built as a monument to Enver Hoxha, the dictator who ran the country with an iron fist from the end of the second world war until his death in 1985. Although determined to isolate his country from the rest of the world, Hoxha, bizarrely, made an exception for the films of Norman Wisdom, who consequently remained a cult figure in Albania long after he went out of fashion at home.

Yet, despite Albania’s plucky attempts to brand itself the “Switzerland of the Balkans”, Tirana is no Geneva. Walk past the designer shops and you have to be careful not to trip over the generators chugging away on the pavement. Power cuts, often several hours long, are a daily nuisance, especially in summer, when temperatures hit the high 30s and everyone turns up their air conditioning. Gross domestic product per head is just £1,475 – against £17,970 in the UK – although the dominance of what is known euphemistically as the “informal economy” means the figure is understated.

For those looking purely at an investment, buying in Tirana is straightforward. Albania-Estate, a British-based agency, is offering several projects in the capital, with prices starting at £370 per square meter – about half those in Sofia, the Bulgarian capital. Although rental returns are not expected to be high, investors are hoping prices will soon rise as more Albanians are drawn to the city in search of the best jobs.

Typical of buyers is Colin Clarke, 47, an accountant from Belfast whose portfolio already includes properties in Liverpool, Bulgaria, northern Cyprus and Texas. He has just paid £27,000 for a one-bedroom flat in the Fortesa development, a complex of 232 flats on the edge of town, due to be completed in the middle of next year. “The world has been passing Albania by,” Clarke says. “It is surrounded by countries that have been doing well. But it is starting from such a low base, improving its infrastructure and attracting a lot of direct foreign investment.” He plans to borrow 70% of the purchase price from one of several banks ready to lend to nonresident foreigners. Although optimistic about renting out his flat for £200 a month, he expects it may take time to pay its way. “It’s the capital growth I am looking for,” he adds.

Albania’s real charm, however, lies in its coastline, which stretches more than 200 miles from the Adriatic, in the north, to the Ionian, in the south. Some of it, admittedly, is already far from unspoilt: Durres, the country’s second city, has been turned into a kind of Albanian Benidorm, with blocks of flats built willy-nilly along the coast, many of them without any planning permission. Vlore, a couple of hours’ drive south, is considerably better. The center is built-up and filled to bursting in summer with holidaying Albanians, but the town has been developed more sensitively. It also has a marina, but don’t expect to see many Albanian boats – in order to curb the burgeoning trade in smuggling and people-trafficking, the government has put restrictions on locals owning powerboats.

Leave the towns behind and you really appreciate the country’s potential. The most beautiful stretch of the coast is probably south of Vlore, past Himare and Sarande, and down to the ancient Greek city of Butrint, a Unesco World Heritage Site, reached along a winding mountain road that allows the locals to put their idiosyncratic driving skills on scary display. The wide, sandy beaches have been kept in their pristine state by the sheer hell of getting here: the drive from Tirana’s Rinas airport, the only international airport in the country, can take a good five hours, although an alternative is to fly to Corfu and take the short ferry ride across.

The holy grail for the many large investors that have begun looking at Albania over the past year is to buy large enough stretches of seafront land to put together and build self-contained gated resorts. This would allow British and other foreign holiday-makers to enjoy the country’s natural beauty without suffering its grimmer realities. The British estate agent Savills, in particular, is looking at one such development north of Durres.

The choice for individual investors without several million pounds to spend is far more limited: a lack of clarity over legal title (compounded by the process of restoring land seized by the communists to its former owners) coupled with the locals’ flagrant disregard for planning law, makes buying an existing property a potentially perilous business.

Some enterprising Albanian businessmen, nevertheless, offer to source land and supervise the building of a villa. Redi Merepeza Toptani, who runs Real Estate in Albania (www.realestateinalbania.com), a Tirana-based agency, says frontline plots cost anything from £30 to £120 per square meter, with building costs ranging from £140 to £280 per square meter; a typical four-bedroom villa on a generous 1,000-square-meter plot could set you back about £100,000. “We can sort out the permissions and everything for you,” he says. “And you get the completed house.”

Alternatively, you could go for one of the coastal developments being marketed to foreign buyers. Antony Bowler, 45, and his wife, Melanie, 40, who run a music business doing Abba and Bee Gees tribute shows, have bought a one-bedroom, 69-square-meter penthouse flat in the Soleal resort, just down the coast from Vlore, for £25,700 through agents Barrasford & Bird. The couple are so happy with a flat they bought last year on the Black Sea in Bulgaria through the same company that they decided to try their luck in Albania. “It’s a lot cheaper than Bulgaria, the weather is better and the sea is better,” Melanie says. They expect to make only a minimal return for the first few years, but hope it will eventually start paying its way.

How soon that happens depends as much on foreign perceptions of Albania as on concrete things such as new roads and power-transmission networks. Which brings us back to that image problem. “We haven’t heard anything good coming out of Albania for as long as anyone can remember,” admits Richard Bannister, managing director of Albania-Estate, “but that’s changing. Look what happened to Bulgaria. People used to know it only for crime and mafia, but these days it’s being talked about everywhere, even though nothing has really changed with the place, apart from the fact it is now in the EU. The same thing is going to happen with Albania.”

Balkan bargains

Croatia: Prices in the best locations are already close to western European levels, but there are still some old stone houses to restore

Montenegro: Thanks to its beautiful coast, it has become popular since winning independence from Serbia in June 2006. Prices have jumped by up to 50% over the past year, boosted by Russian buyers

Greece: Although more expensive than its former communist neighbors, it is cheaper than Italy or Spain

Romania: A favorite with investment buyers since the country joined the EU in January. Prices in Bucharest, the capital, are low compared to other eastern European cities, but rising fast

Bulgaria: The Black Sea coast has been heavily marketed to British buyers as the new Spain, while its ski resorts are cheap alternatives to the Alps. But there is a danger of oversupply


 

Last Updated on Monday, 23 November 2009 15:31
 
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pressthree

 

 

The Perfect Place of Bunk

Metro, August 1, 2008

A perfect place to bunk off Albania once the most mysterious country in Europe, this small nation is now opening up, Says Mary Anne Evans

No sooner have I mused that perhaps this is the new Greece than things take a confusing turn. I've just had a Greek salad, topped off with some of the best feta I have ever tasted, and I've finished it with one of those strong, sweet, black and thick-as-molasses Greek coffees when I'm introduced to a chap called, I kid you not, Zorba. 'Ah, Zorba the' 'Albanian,' comes his swift interruption. 'Zorba the Albanian. As a nation, we do have somewhat an identity problem.'

He's not kidding. Albania may be only a stone's throw from Greece and Italy but for decades it may as well have been light years away, thanks to the austere, isolationist regime of former dictator Enver Hoxha and his successor Ramiz Alia. Today, like the rest of former eastern Europe, the country is trying to play catch up with the rest of the continent.

Wrong impressions

The confusion this brings can be further complicated by our own lack of knowledge of Albania. When I mentioned my holiday plans to friends, the response had been doubtful. 'That's the place still ruled by the mad communist, right?' Explaining some of the plus points (he's been dead for 20 years, there's no euro and its neighbors are currently suffering from an invasion of red-faced and pot-bellied Brits) didn't help either: 'Isn't Norman Wisdom still massive there?' another had asked.

Unperturbed and with only a few days to explore, I've decided to stick to the south of the country. Albania is smaller than Belgium and the road from the capital Tirana to the region bordering Greece makes for a long, slow, bone-shaking journey over twisting mountain tracks so potholed even Jeremy Clark son might reject the challenge.

But despite the roads and the competitive Albanian driving, it's worth every jolt to reach a landscape twice as spectacular as the Alpes-Mari times. Even the weird, omnipresent, dumpy bunkers constructed in the 1970s grow on me. Ordered by Hoxha at his most paranoid, they litter the landscape like dead Daleks but become oddly endearing when brightly painted and sporting flower pots or converted into restaurants. At the ancient 100-acre Unesco World Heritage site of Butrint, I test my Greek theory even further. It has the advantage of being a short drive from the coastal resort of Saranda, where boats regularly arrive from Corfu but, despite being one of the greatest classical cities of the Mediterranean, it remains largely unknown.

The date of the city's foundation is lost in the Trojan mists of time. By the 4th century BC, the original settlement had grown into a thriving port and spa town - the Bath of the ancient world. However, the remains - a huge amphitheater and three massive stone walls built by the Illyrians - are just the start of a story of thousands of years of conquest and reconquest that is slowly being revealed.

Hidden treasures

Roman bath-houses, an aqueduct, 6th-century buildings such as the spectacular Byzantine palace and the largest basilica after Hagia Sophia in Istanbul make up just a small part of what you see - and what you see is just 15 per cent of what lies beneath.

The next morning, I move on to Gjirokaster. Known both as the 'city of stone' and the 'town of 1,000 steps', it is one of the best preserved Ottoman cities in the world. Narrow cobbled streets of tall, 19th-century Grey stone houses topped with Grey slate roofs climb up a hillside to a massive medieval castle. Here, a grim prison block enthusiastically used by Albania's King Zog in the 1920s and then the Nazis in World War II now houses an armaments museum. In the grounds, there are the rusting remains of a US plane that was shot down in 1957, allegedly for spying.

Ideal isolation

Alongside such jewels are the Ottoman city of Berat, the ancient Greek site of Appolonia and Kruja, where Albanian hero Skanderbeg successfully resisted a 15th-century Ottoman invasion - a story lavishly and relentlessly told in a museum devoted to his heroics.

From Saranda, the rest of the Albanian Riviera sweeps north past empty beaches with a few simple hotels and restaurants and more jolly bunkers decorating the hillsides. No pedalos, no ice cream sellers, no touts selling necklaces it's so splendidly isolationist - in a very different way to what Hoxha imagined - I decide to abandon my theory about the new Greece. The country seems to be doing a decent job of becoming the new Albania - but they do need to find a better way of promoting it. Back at the airport I order an Albanian coffee. The waiter looks at me blankly before beaming: 'Surely you mean a Greek one?'

* British Airways flies five times a week from Gatwick. Return flights from £234. www.britishairways.com. Several tour operators offer package holidays including Albania Holidays (www.albania-holidays.com) and Regent Holidays (www.regent-holidays.co.uk).

Bare essentials

Albania borders Montenegro, Kosovo, Macedonia and Greece. The capital Tirana is in the north while ports along the coast connect with Italy and Corfu

Language: Albanian

Currency: £1 = 150 Lek

Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 November 2009 15:33
 
albania an emerging market
  Albania 'Ignored' by Foreign Investors

Property Wire

March 28, 2008.

Despite its Mediterranean location, Albania's property market is 'being ignored' by foreign property seekers, it is claimed. This might be about to change, however, as established real estate organizations get in on the act.

A number of factors have attracted, among others, UK-based Barrasford and Bird, and Emerging Markets Understood Ltd (EMU). Colliers consultancy has recently opened an office and RE/MAX real estate agents are contemplating buying a franchise and entering the market.

A recent report drew a favorable picture of the future of property investment in Albania. Economically, Albania saw six per cent GDP growth in 2007, while at the same time retaining relatively low living costs. Political problems had prevented construction permits from being issued for two years but this was finally resolved at the end of 2007.

Among Albania's main attractions for foreign investors looking for an overseas property are the ease of getting financing; low transaction costs; no taxes on purchase, capital gains, withholding or inheritance; no value added tax on real estate purchases; no state or wealth taxes; no transfer tax; and high capital growth.

On the down side the country, which is currently one of Europe's poorest destinations, despite positive developments, still suffers from virtually non-existent infrastructure, including its road and electricity networks. But a new ring road around Tirana which will be connected to other routes that are also under construction is expected to open in the next 18 months. A new airport at Rinas, which is just 20 minutes from the city centre and the only international airport in the country, is serviced by many of Europe's larger air carriers with direct daily flights.

Desirable units in the capital Tirana and around the coast have been appreciating by around 30 per cent per year-on-year. Most experts predict that Tirana property values will show an annual growth of about 25 per cent in the coming years.

There used to be open countryside between the airport and Tirana. Now new commercial buildings line the main road into the city and companies such as Citroen, Hewlett-Packard and Peugeot have opened distributor sites in the country. Salaries are rising and over the past six years, city-center apartment prices have quadrupled.

But like many countries in the Balkans, the biggest problem is clean title deeds. The Albanian government is still in the process of returning property to its pre-communist owners and disputes over ownership and forged title deeds can be an issue.

'Rapid infrastructure upgrades, a central European location and low labor costs are driving industry and tourism in Albania to new levels. Incoming international companies are able to take full advantage of the country as a manufacturing and distribution hub, while tour operators such as Club Med and even Easy Cruise (budget cruise line) have identified the coastal areas as a profitable venture,' said Simon Feek, managing director of EMU.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 November 2009 13:49