The shed is circled in case you cannot see the shed. Photo via Mercury
Where Is It? In someone's front room! In Bethnal Green!
What Is There to Do Locally? Think about your life choices up to this point, I would've thought;
Alright, How Much Are They Asking? £530 [$812], per month, bills included.
"Is London good, Joel?" my friends back home ask me, in their quaint way, with their funny little accents and their cursory-at-best knowledge about metropolitan things like Ubers and guacamole, and I tell them "Yes," I say. "It takes an hour to get anywhere and all the burgers have pulled pork on them, and you pay to take a elevator to the top of the tallest skyscrapers, and look down but not jump. It's brilliant," I say, "how everything is unlivably expensive and mad. People give you promotional bottles of Lucozade sometimes on the Tube!" I say, and their eyes bulge in awe. "You can rent a shed in someone's front room!" I say, and they start screaming.
It's difficult to process this one, mainly because this is a shed in a front room. A shed—a shed, remember, is a specialist wooden box for dads to cry in and a place for normal people to keep their old plant pots and bikes—but it has been erected not in a garden but in a front room, painted an inoffensive shade of off-white, nestled behind the sofa. It's like looking at a whale carefully hidden in an airplane, or a lamppost coming out of a frog—something anonymous and boring, rendered insane by its context.This was the discovery made by flathunter Joe Peduzzi when he went along to a SpareRoom viewing in Bethnal Green. "'When I first walked in I sort of noticed the shed in the background but didn't really take it in," he said, after the viewing. "Then I scanned around the room and couldn't see a bed so I asked where it was and the guy just pointed to the corner. I stuck my head in for a look but there was basically no room for movement. The mattress was right against the walls of this shed and the windows were blacked out." You might have missed it at the first scan-through, so please just read this quote again, with feeling: "I sort of noticed the shed in the background but didn't really take it in".On VICE Sports: How a Former NCAA Basketball Player Became the First American in Aussie Rules Football
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Here's that shed again, just in case you forgot about it somehow
But then this probably isn't the first attempt at indoor shed rental in London, and it won't be the last. Landlords are robots designed to spot how to turn slithers of potential space into a semi-livable but fully rentable opportunity, robots who say things like "I fixed the boiler promptly as a sign of goodwill, but I will now be bringing up the rent to market value," robots who say, "a handyman will be hitting everything in the house with a hammer on Sunday morning, hope that's OK," robots who say, "no wonder you've got damp in here, you keep opening the windows! Don't open windows. That's an extra £40 [$60] a month each on the rent," landlords who heave a flatpack shed up two sets of stairs to assemble it in a front room in an attempt to squeeze an extra £530 a month out of this broken, broken rental market. And until we do what I have long been suggesting we do—round up the landlords, in a line, blindfolded and stood against a wall and shot—until we all collectively rise up and get that done, this is how it goes: all of us, tired and poor and alone, living that "beds in sheds" lifestyle.Follow Joel Golby on Twitter.On NOISEY: No Money, No Space, No Time: How London Has Forced Out Musicians