Archive for May 15th, 2008

National Work From Home Day

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

In a nice bit of circuitousness, I discover that today is National Work From Home Day. This is both apt, as I’m here in Lausanne to talk at Going Solo about what freelances can do to keep a healthy balance between work and non-work, and ironic as I spent all day travelling and definitely not working from home. Mind you, I do it all the time and the novelty wore off, oh, about ten years ago.

I used to use half my lounge as my office, with a proper desk, chair and filing cabinet. I even had in-trays. But now I’m relegated to a coffee table, and it’s really not great. There’s no doubt in my mind that my new house, whenever it gets built, will have to have an office space in it somewhere. Whether it’s hidden away in the attic or integrated into the main living space I don’t know. Either plan has advantages and drawbacks, but so long as I have somewhere to hide away my clutter, I think either would work.

Meantime, I wonder if they’re going to start a National Work From Airports, Hotels and Conferences Day…

GDL08: Shed special

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

As a special treat for Alex over at Shedworking, I thought I’d take a quick look at some of the sheds on offer at Grand Designs Live last week.

GlassPod

This GlassPod is the same glass structure that was included in the Grand Village. It’s incredibly sleek, providing lovely views of your garden or the countryside (if you have such a view), but I felt very exposed when I was inside it, like a goldfish in a bowl. I can imagine that if you don’t have the room to give this a lot of clear space around it, it could end up being very ugly. And of course, glass is a two-edged sword: If you can see out you can see in, so anything you put in here is going to be on view to the world. Probably not ideal for shedworking.

Jorntrahus outside

Jorntrahus inside

This Jörnträhus shed has a classic Scandinavian design, all warm wood with a sauna-esque feel. Add some gingham curtains, though, and I’d be forever waiting for Heidi to pop her head out of the door and ask if I want some goats cheese (and yes, I know Heidi was Swiss!). Stylistically, I’m not sure how a shed like this would fit into the English landscape or with most English architecture. If you’re building a log cabin, then perhaps you could get away with this in your garden, but it’s a bit clichéd for my taste.

Rooms Outdoor

Now on to the pièce de résistance, Rooms Outdoor and their, well, room outdoors. Not the cheapest of sheds, it has to be said (I can’t remember exactly how much it cost – I think it was around £16k), but the Haus+ certainly is a cut above the rest. It comes with a kitchenette and separate toilet, creating a space that is practical enough to work in all day, or to even carry a sofa bed if you want to use it as a guest room.

Sofas

The Haus+ had plenty of room to relax and work, and didn’t feel as cramped as the Jörnträhus did. Rooms Outdoor had their display kitted out more like a conservatory or second lounge than an office, but if you removed some of the furniture there’d be loads of space for mundane things like book shelves and filing cabinets, or whatever else you want in your office.

Workspace

Kitchenette

Having the kitchenette is a really nice touch – it makes the room just that little bit more self-sufficient, so you don’t have to keep trotting back and forth to your house if you want a cuppa. And of course, a loo is a very pragmatic and useful addition.

Loo

Indeed, I really loved the Haus+. I could imagine having one of these at the bottom of the garden, my little unwired escape pod where I could go to hide from the internet, read a book, maybe even write a book. All I need now is a garden to put it in.