Property in Galicia
By Rupert Wright, published in The Sunday Times, October 2004
Now is a good time to visit Galicia. First, it is Xacobeo
or Holy Year at Santiago de Compostela. This only happens
when St James's day falls on a Sunday, so the next opportunity
will not be until 2010. At 12 o'clock and 5 o'clock
they say a mass in the baroque cathedral, during which
they swing a giant incense burner, rather like the bottom
of a hurricane lamp, up and down the nave. For house
buyers and investors, there is an even better reason
to go there: this is probably the last chance to pick
up a house in Spain on the sea for less than £50,000.
Sarah Allinson, a single mother of two children in
her 40s, came to Galicia 18 years ago. She fell in love
with the area and with a local man. They are no longer
together, but she retained her passion for her adopted
region.
"The quality of life is very good, the health
service is excellent and the locals are very friendly,"
she says. "I think the weather suits the British
constitution. And the pace of life makes you slow down.
In addition, the schools are great, there is no bullying,
and my children are very happy here."
Galicia is often compared to the west coast of Ireland,
which is not good news for those with memories of leaden
skies, anoraks and umbrellas during summer holidays.
Allinson's love for Galicia has led to her setting up
BK Property, a small estate agency that helps people
find a house in the region, and helps with administration
and in some cases the renovation work. But Allinson
insists that the Rias Bajas area around the south coast
enjoys a much better climate. Here prices are higher,
because it is only five hours' drive from Madrid. However,
as a place to have a second home in real Spain, this
is perfect.
According to Jose Luis Garcia of the La Toja development
company, there are some British buyers, but they are
a tiny minority. La Toja is a small island linked to
the mainland by a bridge. Popular with rich Madrileños
- buyers from Madrid - there are about 900 properties
on the place, a 9-hole golf course, and wonderful empty
sandy beaches. According to government figures Galicia
ended 2003 with average property prices of 918
per m2, giving it the 3rd lowest property prices of
all of Spain's 17 Autonomous regions, and prices that
are just 61 per cent of the national average. However
La Toja is the most exclusive place on the Galician
coast and here prices are considerably higher with three-bedroom
apartments starting at around 240,000 Euros.
Property prices in Galicia have risen for 10 consecutive
years but nothing like the price rises in other Spanish
regions. Over 10 years the price of property in Galicia
has risen by a total of 74 per cent compared to a national
average of 136 per cent, rising to over 200 per cent
in the Balearics. Some people have been attracted to Galicia partly as
a result of the lower prices.
"We looked all over Spain, including around Tarifa,
right in the south," says Chris Sykes, 39, a landscape
gardener based in Balham. "But prices there were
very expensive and it was very windy. We have some very
good friends who live in La Coruña, who persuaded
us to come and look at Galicia." They came, they saw, and they bought. Based on a long
summer holiday two years ago, the Sykes's - Chris's
wife is called Eva and they have two children, Theo
7 and Luca 4 - are just finalizing the purchase of a
three-bedroom house in Serres, a hamlet close to Muros,
a pretty fishing village not far from Finisterre - Galician
for Land's End. "The house is pretty basic," says Chris. "There
are two rooms downstairs, a kitchen and a living room,
and three bedrooms upstairs. There is also a good-sized
garden that I am looking forward to landscaping, as
well as a barn that could be developed."
The Sykes's are paying 67,000 for the place,
but feel confident that it is a good investment.. "It's
just so beautiful, it's calm, it's like going back a
hundred years. It's a bit like Cornwall: the beaches
are empty - that's partly because the water is freezing
cold."
Sykes says that although it is a drawback that the
place is quite inaccessible, this is part of its charm.
There are flights to La Coruña and Santiago de
Compostela, and there is a ferry from Plymouth to Santander.
People who buy further south can also take advantage
of Porto airport in Portugal, which has cheap flights
from London. There are rumours that easyjet is going
to start flights to Santiago, which will make the pilgrimage
a bit easier.
While the Sykes's are only planning to use their place
for long summer holidays, Geoff Fox is moving his whole
family to a large country dwelling twenty minutes inland
near Pontevedra. Fox, 50, and his wife Jane, just turned
30, are planning to live there with their two young
children, Charlie, 3, and Esme, 1. They bought the place
at the end of 2002, but only took possession in July
last year. "There were more than 40 people who
owned the place," says Fox. "So we had to
negotiate with each of them to sell their share."
The house is a large farmhouse, split into different
parcels. There is the main house, a courtyard ruin,
and a number of outbuildings and a cottage. Fox and
his wife paid 345,000 for the place, including
seven acres of land. They expect to pay a further 100,000
or so to convert it, which will include making a small
guest house that they will let out for holidays rentals.
"We came to the area a few times before we bought,"
says Fox. "We looked in Andalucia first, but the
weather is kinder here and the people are more friendly."
They have sold their house in Shaftesbury in Dorset
because "we were fed up with the UK culture".
Now they plan to live and work in Galicia, and educate
their children their too. Fox runs a small company providing
technical support on power and cooling systems for IT
firms. He aims to travel to see his customers, but return
whenever he can to Galicia.
"This is undiluted Spain," he says. "We've
had nothing but warmth from the local people, unlike
some of the arrogance we noticed in the Andalucians."
Only those with a highly developed religious fever
should contemplate living in Santiago de Compostela,
for it is full of people with long hair, beards and
wearing sandals. However, drive west for an hour and
you reach a dramatic coastline, full of pretty fishing
villages such as Muros, Rian Xo and Riviera. Carnota
is especially stunning, while Finisterre is on the shipping
forecast and the closest thing to living on a boat that
you can get. You can pick up a house with frontline
sea views in any of these places for less than £100,000.
The market is so undeveloped that often there are no
agents selling the houses, just handwritten signs and
a phone number telling you that the place is for sale.
They will often need some work, but Sarah Allinson has
a team of builders who can carry out the renovation.
What should you look out for? According to Mark Stucklin,
head of Spanish Property Insight, a web-based consultancy,
many properties in Galicia - especially older ones -
are not inscribed in the land registry so you need to
take care when you buy. "You should never buy a property that is not inscribed
in the land registry as it does not give you sufficient security of ownership," he
says. "If you find a property that is not inscribed
you should have the vendors inscribe the property before
you sign the deeds of sale. This process does not usually
take more than a few months and makes your purchase
infinitely more secure. Always have a lawyer check the
details of the property in the land registry before
signing any contracts or making any payments."
Not everybody is convinced by the lure of Galicia.
Thomasina Turner, a 35-year-old Irish woman has just
spent a month looking for a place to live in Galicia.
Her conclusion? "It's the wrong part of Spain,"
she says. "I don't see any point travelling to
the end of the world and finding that it is just like
Ireland. I want balmy evenings and flamenco, not log
fires, baggy jumpers and bagpipes."
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