We built our posh shed office using stuff from the skip and saved £23,000

Can we move in? (Credits: Graham Anderson / SWNS)
Can we move in? (Credits: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

A couple saved £23,000 by building a garden office shed from scratch, using recycled materials they’d saved from a skip. 

Graham Anderson, 35, and his wife, Rachel, 34, were working from their spare bedroom – but decided they needed more space with their two children running around.

‘We realised we had a growing family of two infant boys – a one-year-old and a four-year-old – and we were working from home in one bedroom. So wanted to free up at that bedroom and have other space.’ said Graham. 

The couple – who are both architects – set about designing and transforming an unused patch of land at the bottom of their garden to use as a workspace.

‘It’s a completely new build from scratch’ said Graham, an architectural technologist, from Eastleigh, Hampshire, ‘We just worked with the amount of garden we wanted to use and we wanted it to also be a sunroom as well.’

Graham and Sarah Anderson?s shed as it was being built. Release date July 25 2024. Meet the man who is vying for the Shed of the Year title after turning his old strawberry patch into a ?12k summer work cabin using recycled materials. Graham Anderson, 35, and wife Rachel, 34, decided that with four little ones running round they needed more space to work from than the bedroom they were sharing at the time. The couple - both architects - set about designing and transforming their unused patch of land at the bottom of their garden into a vibrant garden room, designed and constructed as a home office to free up the bedroom they were previously using. Graham, alongside his father-in-law, also called Graham, spent the next year constructing and building their new hub.
Graham built the shed from scratch with his father-in-law (Credits: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

Graham and Sarah Anderson???s stylish outside shed which functions as the couple's office, they have entered it into Cuprinol Shed of the Year 2024. Release date July 25 2024. Meet the man who is vying for the Shed of the Year title after turning his old strawberry patch into a ??12k summer work cabin using recycled materials. Graham Anderson, 35, and wife Rachel, 34, decided that with four little ones running round they needed more space to work from than the bedroom they were sharing at the time. The couple - both architects - set about designing and transforming their unused patch of land at the bottom of their garden into a vibrant garden room, designed and constructed as a home office to free up the bedroom they were previously using. Graham, alongside his father-in-law, also called Graham, spent the next year constructing and building their new hub.
It’s an office, sunroom and kids’ playroom (Picture: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

Graham, alongside his father-in-law, also called Graham, then spent a year constructing and building their new hub.

The two Grahams spent their weekends putting together the shed for over a year. Graham Anderson said said: ‘The main interesting component is that we used a lot of recycled materials to be as economical as possible.’

They made an effort to source their materials from free online ads.

‘It was quite arduous – spending a lot of time collecting stuff, keeping an eye out for the right types of insulation, working with unknown quantities and we just managed to make it work without much wastage really.’ said Graham.

Not your average garden shed (Picture: Graham Anderson / SWNS)
Not your average garden shed (Picture: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

Graham and Sarah Anderson?s shed as it was being built. Release date July 25 2024. Meet the man who is vying for the Shed of the Year title after turning his old strawberry patch into a ?12k summer work cabin using recycled materials. Graham Anderson, 35, and wife Rachel, 34, decided that with four little ones running round they needed more space to work from than the bedroom they were sharing at the time. The couple - both architects - set about designing and transforming their unused patch of land at the bottom of their garden into a vibrant garden room, designed and constructed as a home office to free up the bedroom they were previously using. Graham, alongside his father-in-law, also called Graham, spent the next year constructing and building their new hub.
They spent almost a year finding materials and building the shed-office (Credits: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

They found the insulation for the roof in a skip using Gumtree, the front window they got from an unwanted window re-seller, and the timber was reclaimed with help from the Southampton Wood Recycling Project.

‘It’s a low energy building as there are lots of layers of membranes which are all taped up and super well-insulated so it’s relatively warm in the winter.’ Graham said

Next to the office, they designed and built a shaded patio area with a bench for social functions.

A cosy spot to work in (Picture: Graham Anderson / SWNS)
A cosy spot to work in (Picture: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

Their frugal decision making meant they were able to build their summer for just £12k in total – £23k less than the £35k Graham estimates the build would have cost them had they got someone to do it for them.

‘Building the garden office as a self-build project was greatly satisfying but also financially essential, we would not have been able to afford to do it otherwise.’ said Graham ‘It’s lucky we had the knowledge and skills to get hands on make it a reality’.

Graham and Rachel now use the space at least three times a week to work from home. Their children also like to use the space to play with their lego.

Next to the office, they Graham and Sarah have built a shaded patio area with a bench for social functions. Release date July 25 2024. Meet the man who is vying for the Shed of the Year title after turning his old strawberry patch into a ??12k summer work cabin using recycled materials. Graham Anderson, 35, and wife Rachel, 34, decided that with four little ones running round they needed more space to work from than the bedroom they were sharing at the time. The couple - both architects - set about designing and transforming their unused patch of land at the bottom of their garden into a vibrant garden room, designed and constructed as a home office to free up the bedroom they were previously using. Graham, alongside his father-in-law, also called Graham, spent the next year constructing and building their new hub.
When two architects build a shed… (Picture: Graham Anderson / SWNS)

‘Because we’re both architects we didn’t want to just buy an old shed so we were always going to design it ourselves and save as much money as possible.’

Graham entered his shed into the Cuprinol Shed of the Year 2024 competition for a ‘bit of fun’ but says it’s a ‘nice feeling’ to be shortlisted in the ‘Cabin/Summerhouse’ category.

‘I’m not thinking too far ahead about winning the whole thing though.’ He said. 

You can vote for Graham’s build here.

Related Posts


This will close in 0 seconds