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Another £70k beachhut

Must be the sun coming out but shed by the sea madness goes on this time in Southwold, Suffolk

The smart blue and white hut, called Reverie, is in the highly sought-after Gun Hill area of the town, near the harbour, and could be yours for offers of more than £70,000.

beachhut

For your money you also get seaside essentials such as a veranda, lounging chairs, wind breaks and a gas stove and kettle.

There is also an annual lease fee of about £500 to Waveney District Council.

Richard Leeming, director of estate agents Flick and Son, who are selling the property, said the beach hut, which has been owned by the same family for nearly 40 years, was being sold via a process similar to closed bids where potential buyers do not know what other bidders are offering.

from EDP24

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Beach huts of the week

Now that Flickr allows videos, it’s great to see the quality of them.

I love this time lapse sheds by the sea video.

unfortunately the user wont allow it to be embedded in other sites.

Shed of the Year judge- Kathryn Ferry Q & A

Our Dr of Sheds as I unfairly call her, Kathryn Ferry has answered my Q &A and we look forward to her views during Shed week on all things hut.

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Q) To you what sums up a beachut?

It’s a seaside escape, a place you can make your own and retreat to for a bit of relaxation. There is no better place from which to watch the weather change or listen to the crash of waves on the beach. Conversely a beach hut can also be really sociable because owners have a great community spirit. For me beach huts offer a splash of colour right on the country’s edge and I love the fact that such a small and basic building can be a genuine icon!

Q) Do you feel that beach hut ownership is currently pricing normal people out of the market?

Prices have got a bit mad recently but at least it’s a sign that beach huts and the British seaside are desirable again. It’s most frustrating when you read about waiting lists up to ten years long and then walk along the prom to find loads of the huts locked up! Some councils let their huts for short periods but even at places like Southwold, where most are privately owned, you can still get the use of a hut for your holiday. Tourist offices can give advice about this and owners also advertise their huts for hire on www.beach-huts.com Even if you would prefer to have your own, the hire option is definitely worth investigating because that way you get the benefits without having to spend your weekends doing repairs and painting!

Q) What one bit of advice would you give to potential beach hut owners?

Make sure that you live close enough to your hut to enjoy it as much as possible! People have good intentions when they get their own hut but if it’s too far away you’ll have to plan trips instead of just going when the sun shines.


Q) What’s the most useful thing to have in your beach hut?

A gas stove. It makes the difference between a place to store stuff and a kind of home from home. With a stove you can brew that all-important cup of tea and it’s also a good heat source when the weather turns chilly. Just make sure that you always keep it turned off when you’re not using it otherwise the next question will be all too relevant…

Q) If your beachhut was on fire, what one thing would you save?

This is going to sound totally cheesy, but I’d save the memories. Beach huts are generally more at risk of destruction than your average shed because of the fact they’re built next to the sea. Storm damage is a real threat and vandalism is sadly all too common. All of which means that keeping things of value in your hut is not necessarily the best idea. It’s the good times you have in your hut that make you love it!

Q) What would be your ultimate bolthole/shed-away-from-it-all and where would it be?

It would obviously have to be by the sea but I’m not sure I’d really want to be completely away from it all. I like to people watch and see boats passing on the horizon. Even though I’ve visited beach huts around the world my ultimate would still probably be in England. I love the East Anglian coast and I’d probably pick Felixstowe. It would be great to have a designer beach hut but if it was really going to be my ultimate then I think I’d actually have a go at building it myself.

Just Sheds Tuesday : Point of Polaris

This weeks shed is not a normal shed, its a wonderful Shed by the sea, or as one of our judges would have it, it’s a beachhut ;)

A wonderful example of this genre of wooden buildings.

Point of Polaris on the Hants/Dorset border.

point of polaris

Beach hut (9X7) substantially internally clad and insulated , for temperature and sound, a small solar panel on roof for iPod speakers, Hut allows for daytime use of hammocks and recliners, wire storage cubes floor to ceiling for all usual beach hut impedimenta, use of a sheet of 6 foot x 4foot perspex as a “door” to extend use and comfort out of high season.

So come on Beachhut owners join the club that is Readersheds and share your shed for this years Shed of the year.

Beach hut of the week - Interleaved

Guzzisue over at Travel, Fibre and Thread has some nice photos of new beach huts at Mablethorpe.

The beachhut is according to her

Constructed of wooden strips interleaved with what is ether perspex or glass, not sure which.

beachhut

Beach hut of the week - Scary!

I have seen this advert when it launched in Dec, but did not have a link then.

Anyway I was watching that show Reaper on E4 and saw the great but scary ident which shows a Beach hut scene again.. lucky I was using Sky$ so could rewind to see it again.

Take a look and let me know what you think?

I’m sure our sheddies could convert their sheds into such wonderful sheds by the sea as this, if given the time and cash.

Lovely seaside sheds

Alex has a nice post featuring a great shed builder James Ward.

as he says (well hes better with words than me)

James Ward is an expert builder of bespoke beach huts constructed with 2×2 Red Swedish Pine frames, 8″x8″ pressure treated legs and subframe to hold the hut securely and tanalised (pressure treated) decking to resist wet and rot, 15mm thick for extra strength.

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You can see more of Jame’s work at his interweb site.

Beach huts and whole beach stolen

According to annova

Border crossing crooks were blamed after an entire beach including beach huts, sun loungers and sand were stolen.

Land locked Hungary has no beaches of its own and tonnes of sand had been shipped in to make the riverside at Mindszentas as near to the real thing as possible.

But managers who closed up the leisure park for winter have found that 6,000 cubic metres of sand as well as playground rides, the huts, and even the wooden shops had been stolen.

Beach huts Friday - Shed or Dead

According to the Press association,

A “dilapidated” building is being transformed into a row of “super surf pods” to accompany Europe’s first artificial reef, a council said today.

The beach huts will have balconies with panoramic sea views of the £1.4 million reef in Boscombe, Dorset.

They will be the first along Bournemouth seafront to have electricity and, for some, running hot and cold water, although it will be forbidden to sleep overnight in them.

Wayne and Gerardine Hemingway, who created fashion brand Red or Dead, have been brought in to turn the neglected 1958 Overstrand building into about 59 bespoke huts.

The two-storey block will have penthouse suites and each one will take a different theme, with places to store watersports equipment.

More at bournmouth.co.uk

Beach huts Thursday - Jabba the Hut

Alex is there first (as usual) with a link to the video of one of those bathing beuties beach huts, I was not a big fan of this (i’m old fashion in my ways) but this timelapse video has helped turn my head.

[youtube V23OS3-QHeU]

as Alex says “Four of the designs are now permanently installed (Come Up And See Me by Michael Trainor, a two-storey hut based on a giant gin and tonic; Eyes Wide sHut by Feix and Merlin, a glamorous ‘picture frame’ hut; Jabba by i-am associates, the world’s first contemporary cave; and Halcyon Hut by Atelier NU which pays homage to the traditional beach hut form) and you can now try and book them for around £25 daily. Contact Bob Suich at East Lindsey District Council on 01507 601111