South East sheds vie to become UK Shed of the Year

The bar of the Lioneses DenImage source, Zoe Bleach
Image caption,

Zoe Bleach's shed bar was built to celebrate the England Women's football team

  • Published

Four South East sheds, three from Kent and one from Sussex, are in the running to be the UK's top shed for 2024.

They are a bar built to watch the England Women's World Cup campaign, an almost completely upcycled hut, a prefab allotment hut, and a bathroom and kitchen that was once a van.

The shortlist was narrowed down from 160 entrants.

The entrants are divided into nine different categories, with the winner decided by a public vote., external

Zoe Bleach's Lionesses Den in Gravesend was created to host viewing parties for the Women's world cup in Australia in 2023, and is kitted out with memorabilia.

"All of the work was completed by ourselves or family members. No professionals touched it," she said.

Image source, Zoe Bleach
Image caption,

The Lionesses Den was built as a place to watch the England Women's football team

The Drover's Halt in Sandwich was put together by Graham Doyle, using a van from 1915, railway sleepers and farmyard scrap.

He built it to be the WC, shower and kitchen for a neighbouring hut he rents out.

He said: "What I planned as a fairly basic hut soon became much more detailed purely through the sheer love of what I was creating."

Image source, Graham Doyle
Image caption,

The Drover's Halt started life as a van in 1915

Heather Playfoot's Four Generation Shed on her allotment in Horsham, West Sussex was built by four generations of her family, including her father, a retired engineer, and uses entirely reclaimed materials.

She said: "We used about 24 pallets in total. The corrugated tin roof sheets were bought from a reclamation site.

"When the sides and base were finished we took it apart and stacked it onto a trailer to bring to my allotment."

Image source, Heather Playfoot
Image caption,

The Four Generation Shed is a family affair

Leianne Lockhart's Chateau in Herne Bay, Kent, was built to champion recycling and sustainability, and to pass that passion on to the next generation.

She said: "My children, and I absolutely thoroughly enjoyed learning about how to work with wood, and teaching them that nothing should be thrown away because it can always be used, also the eco friendly side of things."

Image source, Leianne Lockwood
Image caption,

The Chateau has been built using reclaimed wood

The public vote closes on 2 August.

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