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  • Port in a storm

    Port in a storm
    By Kerin Hope

    FT
    January 17 2009 00:39



    Archaeologist Teo Rokov watches intently as a mechanical digger raises
    a bucket of soil from a building site in Varna's Grtska Mahala, or
    Greek Quarter. Mixed in with the earth, he spots fragments of medieval
    pottery. `This is plain old household stuff but you never know,' he
    says. `We track every construction project in this neighbourhood. If
    something important comes up, the developer covers the cost of a
    full-scale excavation.'

    Originally, and for centuries under Greek, Roman and Turkish rule,
    Varna was a hub for traders shipping salted fish, grain, furs and gold
    to the Mediterranean and beyond. By the early 1900s Armenians, Jews and
    Bulgarians had joined Greek merchants and many took part in a grand
    urban revival of the city, launched by King Ferdinand. New mansions
    designed by Italian architects were painted in pastel colours
    appropriate to a fashionable European resort with a pier, wooden
    bathing huts and a Sea Garden (a stretch of parkland planted with rare
    trees under the supervision of a renowned Czech botanist and
    landscaper).

    Communism followed and, after that, a gritty transition period,
    including shootings of local mobsters in crowded seaside cafés. But,
    according to residents, a group of ex-Bulgarian marines nicknamed the
    `Varna Seals' eventually managed to expel members of the Russian,

    Chechen, Ukrainian and Georgian mafias vying for control of the port
    and the city's underground economy. And today `you can stroll around
    the centre late at night without problems,' says Agap Agapov, a
    restaurant owner in Grtska Mahala.

    Varna now draws about 30,000 new residents a year and it was recently
    rated Bulgaria's `best city to live in' for the second year running in
    a poll carried out by Darik Radio, a private station, and 24 Chasa, a
    national newspaper. Students from three local universities support a
    lively bar and music scene and, in summer, the city's seafront
    promenade fills up with visitors from the capital, Sofia, western
    European tourists bussed in from nearby resorts for a day's sightseeing
    and increasing numbers of Russians, Ukrainians and Romanians, whose own
    Black Sea coastlines are less hospitable than Bulgaria's.

    The country has been hit by energy shortages this month following
    Russia's cut-off of gas supplies to Europe. But the Bulgarian
    government has now asked the European Union for ?¬400m to build a link
    with an alternative Turkish-Greek pipeline and Varna itself plans to
    consider the possibility of building a liquefied natural gas terminal.

    Transport links to the city have already been improving, with gradual
    upgrades to the highway to Sofia, a five-hour drive away, and more
    frequent air connections via Bulgaria Air, which runs thr
    ee flights
    daily to the capital in winter and four in summer. Fraport, a German
    company, is now running the city airport under a 35-year concession,
    investing in a runway refurbishment and expanded terminal facilities,
    and several international airlines, including low-cost operators, now
    fly to Varna from European hubs.

    A new city master plan, due to be launched this year, will be a
    21st-century take on King Ferdinand's grand scheme. Among other
    projects, the commercial port will be moved to a new site on an inland
    lagoon to the west of the city, opening up space for what would become
    the Black Sea's largest and best-equipped marina. `The new master plan
    will allow for a major redevelopment of the port site,' says Delyan
    Dimitrov, of Address, a Bulgarian estate agency. `There'll be luxury
    homes, hotels, restaurants ` in effect a whole new neighbourhood within
    a stone's throw of the Grtska Mahala.'

    For now, the Greek Quarter remains one of the most attractive areas to
    live, with some of the city's highest property prices, ranging from
    ?¬2,200 per sq metre for an apartment in a communist-era four-storey
    block (the maximum height permitted) to ?¬3,000 per sq metre for one in
    a renovated mansion or a new building with a view of the sea.

    Living spaces tend to be compact, with studios running to 50-60 sq
    metres including the balcony, and 100-12
    0 sq metre apartments deemed a
    comfortable size for four-member families. Many dilapidated buildings
    still await refurbishment but the quarter is beloved both by
    old-timers, such as Agapov, who serves fresh fish from the ground floor
    of his family home in a space once occupied by his grandfather's
    tailoring workshop, as well as new arrivals, such as diving instructor
    Iasen Ivanchev, who will soon move into an attic apartment one block
    from the seafront.

    `The neighbourhood is changing; a lot of newcomers to Varna have bought
    homes here. But I wouldn't live anywhere else,' Agapov says.

    `There's a real sense of community,' Ivanchev adds. `You can walk
    everywhere and you wake up in the morning to the sound of seagulls
    calling.'

    But there are downsides to living in the Grtska Mahala, including
    increased traffic, more street noise than in the suburbs and a shortage
    of parking spaces, with only a handful of new, high-end buildings
    having underground garages. `When I was growing up here, we played
    street games all the time. It wasn't quite the same for my daughter,'
    says Darina Ivanova, a colleague of Ivanchev, who moved to the
    neighbourhood as a child.

    As a result, some Varna residents opt for less historic neighbourhoods
    outside the city. The brand-new suburb of Briz has, for example, sprung
    up across a wooded hillside 5km north of the cen
    tre. It boasts
    panoramic views of the sea and attractive apartment buildings close to
    the Sea Garden.

    The area has developed so fast that it will be another year before
    access roads and street lighting are completed. But prices for a
    top-floor apartment with a sea view have doubled in the past two years
    to about ?¬1,600-2,200 per sq metre and are expected to rise marginally
    this year in spite of the global economic crisis. `We expect some
    homeowners in Briz will want to cash in their profits this year, so
    there'll be opportunities to buy on the secondary market,' says Evgeni
    Zlatev, Varna office manager for estate agency Bulgarian Properties.

    Jon White, a British software developer who has created a global
    property portal, and his Estonian wife, Maarika, moved to Varna from
    the UK four years ago. Last year, they sold a property in the city
    centre and moved to a top-floor apartment in Briz, a five-minute walk
    from the beach. `It's nice and quiet but we have amenities like a good
    restaurant across the way and a first-rate supermarket just down the
    road. You can walk or bicycle into town through the Sea Garden,' he
    says.

    Their neighbour is Boryana Shikova, a Varna native who came back to the
    city after working as a corporate lawyer in New York and London. She
    used her savings to buy off-plan in Briz. `It's turned out [to be] a
    better i
    nvestment than I could ever have hoped for,' she says. `I feel
    privileged to live in a place where I can sit on the balcony at night
    and the only lights are of the ships in the bay.'

    Newly developed suburbs to the south of Varna include Asparuhovo,
    overlooking a sandy beach that curves east to the wooded cliffs of Cape
    Galata. Once a dormitory district for workers at the city shipyard
    complete with Soviet-style tower blocks and the site of undeveloped
    military property, it is now rapidly moving upmarket.

    Vladimir Berov, a builder who works on short-term contracts in France
    and Holland, and his wife, Dobromira, are among the area's newest
    residents, having bought an apartment ready for renovation in a block
    close to the municipality's seaside park. `We moved here because we
    thought it a good place to live and it's going to get better,' Berov
    says.

    Just south of Asparuhovo, local developer Bord has launched a
    three-building luxury complex called Varna South Bay that is designed
    for full-time residents ` although second-home buyers are likely to be
    interested too. Yuri Pavlov, a Bord executive, says the aim is to
    create a dynamic community with easy access to schools and the city via
    public transport. The 830 apartments range from large studios to duplex
    penthouses, all with terraces, and prices range from ?¬1,700-?¬2,500 per
    sq metre. There will
    be swimming pools, shops and mini-markets, a 1,000
    sq metre fitness centre, a medical facility and underground parking,
    with a marina and ferry service planned for the development's second
    phase.

    `We expect that most buyers will be foreigners but some will certainly
    rent to Bulgarians,' Pavlov says.

    Kerin Hope is the FT's Athens correspondent.
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