• Education
    • Higher Education
    • Scholarships & Grants
    • Online Learning
    • School Reforms
    • Research & Innovation
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food & Drink
    • Fashion & Beauty
    • Home & Living
    • Relationships & Family
  • Technology & Startups
    • Software & Apps
    • Startup Success Stories
    • Startups & Innovations
    • Tech Regulations
    • Venture Capital
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • Emerging Technologies
    • Gadgets & Devices
    • Industry Analysis
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Advertise with Us
  • Privacy & Policy
Today Headline
  • Home
  • World News
    • Us & Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Middle East
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • Political Parties
    • Government Policies
    • International Relations
    • Legislative News
  • Business & Finance
    • Market Trends
    • Stock Market
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Corporate News
    • Economic Policies
  • Science & Environment
    • Space Exploration
    • Climate Change
    • Wildlife & Conservation
    • Environmental Policies
    • Medical Research
  • Health
    • Public Health
    • Mental Health
    • Medical Breakthroughs
    • Fitness & Nutrition
    • Pandemic Updates
  • Sports
    • Football
    • Basketball
    • Tennis
    • Olympics
    • Motorsport
  • Entertainment
    • Movies
    • Music
    • TV & Streaming
    • Celebrity News
    • Awards & Festivals
  • Crime & Justice
    • Court Cases
    • Cybercrime
    • Policing
    • Criminal Investigations
    • Legal Reforms
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
    • Us & Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Middle East
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • Political Parties
    • Government Policies
    • International Relations
    • Legislative News
  • Business & Finance
    • Market Trends
    • Stock Market
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Corporate News
    • Economic Policies
  • Science & Environment
    • Space Exploration
    • Climate Change
    • Wildlife & Conservation
    • Environmental Policies
    • Medical Research
  • Health
    • Public Health
    • Mental Health
    • Medical Breakthroughs
    • Fitness & Nutrition
    • Pandemic Updates
  • Sports
    • Football
    • Basketball
    • Tennis
    • Olympics
    • Motorsport
  • Entertainment
    • Movies
    • Music
    • TV & Streaming
    • Celebrity News
    • Awards & Festivals
  • Crime & Justice
    • Court Cases
    • Cybercrime
    • Policing
    • Criminal Investigations
    • Legal Reforms
No Result
View All Result
Today Headline
No Result
View All Result
Home World News Europe

a billionaire’s radical vision for a remote Scottish island

June 13, 2025
in Europe
Reading Time: 15 mins read
A A
0
a billionaire’s radical vision for a remote Scottish island
3
SHARES
7
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Ian Wace first saw the advertisement for the remote island of Tanera Mòr in 2013. “It basically said, ‘idiot required,’” the hedge fund manager recalls. But when he set foot on the island in north-west Scotland, overgrown with bracken, moss and brambles, with no proper roads, an abandoned herring station, and views out on to the immense ocean, “I just thought this was an extraordinary place”. 

At around 800 acres and only a mile or so from the mainland, Tanera is the largest of the Summer Isles archipelago. Traditionally, local crofters used the islands for summer grazing of their livestock, giving the enclave its name. The word Tanera is derived from a Norse word meaning haven; indeed the island was used as a safe anchorage by the Vikings as far back as the 11th century. But its fortunes have ebbed and flowed since then, a microcosm of the plight of other rural communities in Scotland and beyond, suffering from urbanisation, population decline and limited job opportunities. 

“It felt very dead,” says Wace of that first visit. “But I thought that was a transitory position caused by under-investment and deep hardship.” Four years or so passed and the island, still unsold, lingered in Wace’s mind. He returned once more. “It was blindingly clear to me that if it was [developed] on a commercial basis, there was a real chance that it would be ruined,” he says. “And I recognised that I would be able to bring together a group of people to do it, without recognising what it actually was.” 

Icelandic horses roam on the island

In 2017, Wace, then 54 and best known for running London-based Marshall Wace, one of the world’s most successful hedge funds, and for philanthropic work that includes helping to set up the Absolute Return for Kids education charity, bought Tanera for £1.7mn. Since then he has galvanised the local community and poured capital investment of around £100mn into a project that has evolved around three pillars of charitable purpose: rural and community regeneration; environmental restoration and protection; and targeted support for those in public service. 

“People want to be seen, want to be heard, want to be cared for and want to care for others,” says Wace. “In a world that is basically extremely lonely, Tanera is a refuge from that loneliness.”

At a time when many societies are lamenting a decline in a sense of purpose and belonging, Tanera tentatively offers a new model. The island’s journey over the past eight years is a story of how a billionaire’s accidental adventure has become a blueprint for harnessing community to breathe new life into people, places and ecosystems.

An older man sits on a stone bench sketching a landscape in watercolours beside a rustic stone cottage
Ian Wace, co-founder of hedge fund Marshall Wace, bought Tanera Mòr for £1.7mn in 2017 and has invested around £100mn since then: ‘In a world that is basically extremely lonely, Tanera is a refuge from that loneliness,’ he says © Peanut & Crumb

Wace says he has no particular connection to Scotland beyond a feeling that, “as someone who likes to paint, the sense of space and remoteness always spoke to me”. And the endeavour has gradually unfolded in an iterative process with an open mind and no defined business plan.

It’s his MO. Wace didn’t go to university and became the youngest-ever director at London-based investment bank SG Warburg, aged 25. Together with Paul Marshall — who has in recent years emerged as one of the UK’s most influential right-leaning media barons — he went on to co-found Marshall Wace in 1997. It kicked off with $50mn in assets, some of which came from financier George Soros. The pair did not start with a grand plan, and their strategy has kept evolving; the London-based firm has subsequently grown to run over $71bn in assets. 

A wooden sailboat with red sails glides past rocky shorelines dotted with pink flowers and a distant marker post
Lugger boats used in the island’s historical herring industry are being restored

“I think when you build a business, what you try to do is to build people who build a business,” says Wace. “You don’t build a business, it’s all about people.”


Tanera’s herring station — where Wace first came ashore — dates back to 1785. At that time it was the heyday of the herring industry and the adjacent bay would have been bustling with dozens of lugger boats, their long drift nets bursting with herring. The small fish — nicknamed silver darlings — were brought ashore to be cured before they were exported to the mainland, Europe and the British colonies. 

At the peak of the fishing trade prosperity in the late 19th century, the island was home to 120 people. However, Tanera’s herring industry fell victim to overfishing and gradually disappeared, devastating both the island and the adjacent mainland community — the subsequent population decline was compounded by the Highland Clearances (the evictions of a significant number of tenants in the Scottish Highlands and Islands) and two world wars. By the time Wace came to do a recce, the herring station was derelict, and the island had a full-time population of just a handful of people. 

A stone archway frames a coastal view with a docked barge, distant hills and a weathered lamp post
The herring station fell derelict when overfishing killed the industry, devastating the island

“I have always had an interest in industrial history,” says Wace, whose demeanour is energetic, intense and tenacious. “And the herring station gave me the narrative to understand how to interpret [Tanera] and how to give the island back its history, while using its past as a way to give the island a future.”

Take Robin Irvine. As a teenager during the early 2000s, he spent two years living on Tanera in a small cottage next to the ruins of the herring station. Each day he commuted back and forth to school on the mainland: 20 minutes on the boat to the village of Achiltibuie, then a 50-minute bus ride along a single-track road to Ullapool. 

Tanera “was a paradise for teenagers”, he recalls. “We were feral, we had ferrets and a buzzard. We ran around the island getting up to all sorts of mischief.” 

A man in a blue jumper and khaki trousers sits on a wooden boat deck in front of a red sail, looking out
Robin Irvine was one of a population of five on the island in the early 2000s; ‘It was a paradise for teenagers. We were feral, we had ferrets and a buzzard’ — today he leads the regeneration and communities group at Summer Isles Enterprises
A young woman in a navy jumper and khaki trousers sits on a shaded wooden bench, gazing into the sunlight
Orfhlaith McDevitt, impact, innovation and delivery officer for the project

Summer holiday rentals aside, the sum total of Tanera’s resident population was five: Irvine, his mother and brother; and the island’s then owners, conservation farmers Bill and Jean Wilder.

After school, Irvine completed an undergraduate degree at the University of Cambridge and then a PhD in social anthropology at the University of St Andrews. He had discounted returning “simply because the career opportunities weren’t here”, he says. That changed when he heard about the island’s new owner. 

Today Irvine leads the regeneration and communities group at Summer Isles Enterprises, the organisation that is delivering the regeneration of Tanera and is itself owned by a charitable trust. He is one of 130 people working on the project, where the average age is early thirties; a new generation that has been drawn to the island’s restoration. “It’s a balance of people who’ve been born and brought up [locally] investing themselves in the project but also embracing new energy from elsewhere,” he says. 

A person bends to gather flowers in a cotton grass meadow overlooking calm water and distant misty hills
One of the 130 people working on the Summer Isles Enterprises project, which includes road building, restoring properties, reviving traditional skills such as weaving and beekeeping, and an extensive planting effort

This includes the likes of Anthony Lewandowski, from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He met his wife Georgie, from Achiltibuie, in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2021; they came to Tanera a year ago to work. 

Staff accommodation is provided on the island and the mainland. “This makes a huge difference for young people,” says Orfhlaith McDevitt, impact, innovation and delivery officer. It helps address two of the area’s socio-economic challenges: a lack of both year-round job opportunities and affordable housing. “It can be difficult up here when the area is so overly reliant on tourists,” she adds, with the ubiquity of holiday lets driving local rents to Edinburgh prices.

One of the first steps in Tanera’s regeneration was to construct five kilometres of roads across the island. Next was tackling the extensive renovations of the dozen or so derelict properties in the north of the island. “In the early days, we worked our way up from the shore, building a road and then restoring each ruin as we came to it,” says Robbie Punt, guest host. Wace, who is dyslexic, paints his designs in watercolours.

A stone cottage with a thatched roof sits at the end of a winding path lined with daisies and evening light
Repurposed materials are used to restore homes, including local stone, reclaimed Ballachulish slate and wood from the Union Canal . . . 
A freestanding bathtub with brass taps sits beneath a window framed by patterned curtains in a tiled alcove
. . . creating a colourful patchwork of history

One of the first properties to be completed was the former café and post office, which has since become “The Mess” and is the epicentre of communal life on the island. Former crofters’ cottages that were knee-high ruins lost in the bracken were brought back to life using traditional carpentry and stonemasonry skills; heather that was cut during excavation for the island’s paths was repurposed as thatching for roofs. A breeze block loo became the Silver Darlings pub, where guests, using chisels, carve their name on the bar or the large oak table.

The guiding principles in the restoration were commitment to hand building and repurposing, using both local materials and those from further afield that might otherwise have been consigned to a skip. More than 60 per cent of the stone used was sourced from around the island. Reclaimed Ballachulish slate was repurposed for roofing and flooring, while wood from the Union Canal, which runs from Falkirk to Edinburgh, was turned into beams, flooring and furniture.

Meanwhile, a large slab of white marble that is now a dining table top in the smokery came from the men’s toilets at The Savoy hotel in London; the chrome basins in the bathrooms of an abandoned boat turned into a cinema are repurposed from wartime German U-boats.

A rustic kitchen with dark wood walls, a marble island, hanging herbs, and vintage butchery tools on display
A slab of white marble that is now a dining table top in the smokery came from the men’s toilets at London’s Savoy hotel

It makes for a colourful, eccentric patchwork of history. At the top of the crossroads of the three main island pathways stands an Avro Lancaster hangar, originally built in 1924, whose previous home was the Woodford Aerodrome in Cheshire — Wace snapped it up on eBay. Inside, the wooden floorboards were salvaged from Winston Churchill’s Old War Office on Whitehall, after they were ripped out during the construction of the new Raffles hotel.

Traditional skills such as weaving and beekeeping have been revived; and an extensive planting effort — more than 100,000 trees, an array of wild flowers, and vegetables growing in raised beds and greenhouses — have transformed the barren landscape and provide a core source of food for the island community. 

A black picnic bench sits inside a greenhouse with raised vegetable beds, shelves of pots, and a rusted door open to reveal a parked SUV outside
Vegetables, used to feed the islanders, growing inside a greenhouse

Like the 18th-century buildings of the herring station — which have been converted into a gathering place for the entire island — the hangar is now a large communal space for workshops and events. 

This emphasis on creating communal spaces is important because from the start of the project, Tanera has provided targeted support for those in public service. To date it has hosted more than 1,000 guests as part of a philanthropic programme, more than half of those from the Taigh Mor Foundation, a mental health and wellbeing charity for those in the emergency services or military. They come for rest and relaxation and to be subsumed in island life: helping out in the garden or in the kitchens; mackerel fishing, picking seaweed or restoring one of the buildings. 

A long wooden table with mixed rustic seating and sheepskin throws is lit by warm sunlight through tall windows
Inside the Avro Lancaster hangar that is now a communal space for workshops and events
An old tugboat is moored on a rocky shore at dusk
An abandoned boat has been turned into a cinema

“Sanctuary is needed for respite and it is also needed for reward,” says Wace. “I think that many people in public service don’t quite get that recognition that they deserve.” 

“This week has given us everything we wanted and everything we didn’t realise we needed,” wrote one guest in the island’s visitors’ book. “It felt like a return to myself and life beyond burden,” wrote another.


The butterfly effect of Tanera is already being felt. 

In July last year, Hurricane Beryl swept across the island of Canouan in the Grenadines; more than 90 per cent of homes were destroyed or damaged, resulting in a humanitarian crisis. Wace, who owns property there, sent $25mn to the relief effort. The Tanera project also sprung into action. 

A stone cottage with a covered porch glows in the golden light beside a calm reflecting pool and distant hills
A sauna and plunge pool has been created from a once-abandoned building

“Within a month Tanera had sent people and equipment to help mobilise the local community and support the island’s recovery,” says Adam Blaker, chief executive of the Summer Isles Enterprises. Closer to home, when a wildfire struck the mountain of Stac Pollaidh on the nearby mainland in April of this year, Tanera sent a crew of more than 30 people and equipment to assist in the firefighting effort.

Back on Tanera, the island is nearing the end of an eight-year period of major construction and entering its next chapter. The team has opened a new cookhouse, developed housing on the south side of the island and expanded its communal spaces. 

House & Home unlocked

Don’t miss our weekly newsletter, an inspiring, informative edit of the news and trends in global property, interiors, architecture and gardens. Sign up here.

In 2024, Wace gifted just under 8,000 acres of crofted land on the mainland to the Coigach Community Development Company, meaning that the majority of the land in the Coigach peninsula is now held by charitable and community organisations. 

At the same time, the Tanera project acquired 1,022 acres of land around Achnahaird Farm that was formerly part of Badentarbet Estate. It is restoring the old buildings, which sleep eight guests. This is one of several mainland projects for which a commercial dimension is being considered to support the island’s charitable objectives. It also includes the Summer Isles Hotel — once owned by Robin Irvine’s family — which will reopen in 2027 after a substantial refurbishment; and the Old Manse in Achiltibuie, formerly an early 20th-century church, which sleeps up to 12. 

Navigating the dynamics between island and mainland, between philanthropic and commercial, will be a key challenge for the project in the months and years ahead.

A lone lamp casts warm light on a quiet stone pier at dusk, with a life ring and small boat below in still water
Lights on the pier at the herring station

The Tanera project confounds traditional mindsets of building, philanthropy and community. It has a level of financial backing, flexibility and long-term thinking that most rural or government-backed projects can only dream of, and the alchemy of this remote corner of north-west Scotland is hard to replicate. 

Recommended

A garden path leading to a brick outbuilding with flowers and trees surrounding it

But the hope is that Tanera can act as an inspiration for regeneration elsewhere, enabling the project to punch well above its weight and have an impact far beyond its shores. 

“I’m a believer of catalytic interventions that can really scale and in doing so achieve something vastly more than you could otherwise,” says Wace. “The values of Tanera are clearly defined; its legacy is still to be written.”

tanera.org

Harriet Agnew is the FT’s asset management editor

Find out about our latest stories first — follow @ft_houseandhome on Instagram



Source link

Previous Post

Nuclear watchdog warns of safety risks after Israeli strike on Iran

Next Post

Hong Kong to allow drone trials with higher payloads to boost low-altitude economy

Related Posts

Italian museum's plea after couple break crystal-covered chair

Italian museum’s plea after couple break crystal-covered chair

June 14, 2025
3
David Beckham, Gary Oldman and Roger Daltrey knighted – DW – 06/14/2025

David Beckham, Gary Oldman and Roger Daltrey knighted – DW – 06/14/2025

June 14, 2025
7
Next Post
Hong Kong to allow drone trials with higher payloads to boost low-altitude economy

Hong Kong to allow drone trials with higher payloads to boost low-altitude economy

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Family calls for change after B.C. nurse dies by suicide after attacks on the job

Family calls for change after B.C. nurse dies by suicide after attacks on the job

April 2, 2025
Pioneering 3D printing project shares successes

Product reduces TPH levels to non-hazardous status

November 27, 2024

Hospital Mergers Fail to Deliver Better Care or Lower Costs, Study Finds todayheadline

December 31, 2024

Police ID man who died after Corso Italia fight

December 23, 2024
Harris tells supporters 'never give up' and urges peaceful transfer of power

Harris tells supporters ‘never give up’ and urges peaceful transfer of power

0
Des Moines Man Accused Of Shooting Ex-Girlfriend's Mother

Des Moines Man Accused Of Shooting Ex-Girlfriend’s Mother

0

Trump ‘looks forward’ to White House meeting with Biden

0
Catholic voters were critical to Donald Trump’s blowout victory: ‘Harris snubbed us’

Catholic voters were critical to Donald Trump’s blowout victory: ‘Harris snubbed us’

0
Boca's Costa gets U.S. visa for CWC after U-turn

Boca’s Costa gets U.S. visa for CWC after U-turn

June 14, 2025

How to Start a CD Ladder With Just $5,000 todayheadline

June 14, 2025

NIO's SWOT analysis: EV maker's stock faces challenges amid growth push todayheadline

June 14, 2025
ET logo

manhunt: Minnesota Lawmakers Shooting: Who is Vance Boelter, the 57-year-old suspect in targeted attack on Representative Melissa Hortman and Senator John Hoffman? todayheadline

June 14, 2025

Recent News

Boca's Costa gets U.S. visa for CWC after U-turn

Boca’s Costa gets U.S. visa for CWC after U-turn

June 14, 2025
4

How to Start a CD Ladder With Just $5,000 todayheadline

June 14, 2025
4

NIO's SWOT analysis: EV maker's stock faces challenges amid growth push todayheadline

June 14, 2025
5
ET logo

manhunt: Minnesota Lawmakers Shooting: Who is Vance Boelter, the 57-year-old suspect in targeted attack on Representative Melissa Hortman and Senator John Hoffman? todayheadline

June 14, 2025
4

TodayHeadline is a dynamic news website dedicated to delivering up-to-date and comprehensive news coverage from around the globe.

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Basketball
  • Business & Finance
  • Climate Change
  • Crime & Justice
  • Cybersecurity
  • Economic Policies
  • Elections
  • Entertainment
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Environmental Policies
  • Europe
  • Football
  • Gadgets & Devices
  • Health
  • Medical Research
  • Mental Health
  • Middle East
  • Motorsport
  • Olympics
  • Politics
  • Public Health
  • Relationships & Family
  • Science & Environment
  • Software & Apps
  • Space Exploration
  • Sports
  • Stock Market
  • Technology & Startups
  • Tennis
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Us & Canada
  • Wildlife & Conservation
  • World News

Recent News

Boca's Costa gets U.S. visa for CWC after U-turn

Boca’s Costa gets U.S. visa for CWC after U-turn

June 14, 2025

How to Start a CD Ladder With Just $5,000 todayheadline

June 14, 2025
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Technology & Startups
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Advertise with Us
  • Privacy & Policy

© 2024 Todayheadline.co

Welcome Back!

OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Business & Finance
  • Corporate News
  • Economic Policies
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Market Trends
  • Crime & Justice
  • Court Cases
  • Criminal Investigations
  • Cybercrime
  • Legal Reforms
  • Policing
  • Education
  • Higher Education
  • Online Learning
  • Entertainment
  • Awards & Festivals
  • Celebrity News
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Health
  • Fitness & Nutrition
  • Medical Breakthroughs
  • Mental Health
  • Pandemic Updates
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion & Beauty
  • Food & Drink
  • Home & Living
  • Politics
  • Elections
  • Government Policies
  • International Relations
  • Legislative News
  • Political Parties
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Middle East
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cybersecurity
  • Emerging Technologies
  • Gadgets & Devices
  • Industry Analysis
  • Basketball
  • Football
  • Motorsport
  • Olympics
  • Climate Change
  • Environmental Policies
  • Medical Research
  • Science & Environment
  • Space Exploration
  • Wildlife & Conservation
  • Sports
  • Tennis
  • Technology & Startups
  • Software & Apps
  • Startup Success Stories
  • Startups & Innovations
  • Tech Regulations
  • Venture Capital
  • Uncategorized
  • World News
  • Us & Canada
  • Public Health
  • Relationships & Family
  • Travel
  • Research & Innovation
  • Scholarships & Grants
  • School Reforms
  • Stock Market
  • TV & Streaming
  • Advertise with Us
  • Privacy & Policy
  • About us
  • Contact

© 2024 Todayheadline.co