| 1. Lyness Industrial Estate
Industrial land amounting to 11.2 hectares is available adjacent
to Scapa Flow, at Lyness on the island of Hoy. The land is owned
by Orkney Islands Council and forms one of the Council’s main
industrial estates.
The land was formerly one of the British Navy’s most important
bases, especially during the two World Wars when Scapa Flow was
the principal northern base for the fleet. The Lyness Base supported
tens of thousands of servicemen during the war years. Another legacy
of the wars is the deep-water Golden Wharf at the edge of the base.
Today this provides direct access between the industrial estate
and Scapa Flow, and
makes the industrial estate a suitable location for large-scale
marine-related industry.
On the southern edge of the estate, there is a hydraulic ramp
for roll on-roll off vessels. This is the island terminal for the
ro-ro
service which connects Hoy to the mainland of Orkney. Orkney Ferries,
a company owned by Orkney Islands Council, operates a frequent
service
between Lyness, and the mainland terminal at Houton
The industrial estate has a few tenanted and owner-occupied industrial
buildings, both new and old. There is also a museum with many artefacts
and much information relating to the war-time history of Lyness
and of Scapa Flow.
But the majority of the land remains available for use. With
the continuing development of the European Marine Energy Centre
at Stromness,
and the presence of the established oil transportation terminal
at the nearby island of Flotta, Lyness may be an ideal location
for support activities related to these industries in particular.
2. The Underground Tanks at Lyness
In the hill behind the Lyness Industrial Estate lie 6 underground
oil storage tanks. These tanks, last used in 1976, are of concrete
construction and were built for the Navy by Balfour Kilpatrick between
1937 and 1939.
The four principal tanks are approximately 700 ft long, with a
width and height estimated to be about 35 feet. Some information
is available from one of the people involved in construction of
the tanks, although no recent survey has been undertaken. It is
said that the construction is very substantial, with concrete up
to 3 feet thick. Their total capacity was 100,000 tonnes of bunker
oil.
The tanks represent a development opportunity for storage purposes
– perhaps more valuable in today’s world for safe storage
of data, in electronic or paper form, than for oil storage. Full
technical surveys could be undertaken once a specific use is proposed.
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