Thursday, July 02, 2026

Dads want to work from home but fear career penalties, says new report

New research from King’s College London suggests more than one in six fathers would quit if forced to work in office full-time, and that working from home in garden offices and other home environments could improve family wellbeing, gender equality, fertility, and staff retention, but only if fathers can use it without stigma or career penalties.

The report, led by King’s Global Institute for Women’s Leadership (GIWL) based at King’s Business School, finds that fathers increasingly value working from home because it allows them to stay committed to paid work while being more present in family life. Yet the report warns that formal access is not enough. Fathers may be allowed to work from home on paper, but workplace cultures, visibility expectations and assumptions about commitment can still make it difficult to use in practice.

Key findings from the report show:

  • around 17% of full-time working fathers who currently work from home say that they would quit if forced back to the office full-time
  • fathers want twice as many working-from-home days as their employer currently allows, around 2.10 days preferred versus 1.10 days allowed
  • 41% of fathers say they are formally allowed some working from home and 39% of fathers say they actually use it
  • workers who work from home are rated less favourably for promotion by managers in the UK, a penalty particularly strong for fathers compared to other groups of workers, especially when it comes to 3-4 days working from home

The report argues that fathers working from home can change how families manage the pressure points of daily life, from commuting and school routines to childcare and household work. It can also help with worker engagement, productivity as well as allowing employers hold on to staff who might otherwise look for roles that fit better with family life.

“Flexible working was never a mothers' issue," said Professor Heejung Chung, Director of the King’s Global Institute for Women’s Leadership and co-author of the report. "It's time we stopped treating it like one. Post-pandemic fathers have discovered something their own fathers never had, the school run, dinner time, the chance to actually be there supporting family well-being and financial stabilities.

“What is more, when men are involved, not only do their ideas of what it means to be a man changes but so do their children’s. A generation is growing up with a different idea of masculinity. Remote work isn't just reshaping offices. It's reshaping families and the future of gender roles.”

Shiyu Yuan, Research Assistant at King’s Global Institute for Women’s Leadership and co-author of the report added: “What employers may have not fully grasped is that working from home is not just nice to have or a cost to be managed, but something must-have and a reason for people to stay. For fathers, it is now a part of the family infrastructures and the coping strategy they rely on to be achieve both their career and family aspirations. Taking it away would disrupt family life, increase stress, and damage the engagement and loyalty of their most experienced staff.

“However, simply providing flexibility is not enough. Without tackling the stigma associated with flexibility, fathers may be fear of using it, or feel forced to use it in ways that protect their image at work while damaging their and their family’s wellbeing.”

Image courtesy Warwick Buildings

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Thursday posts are sponsored by Cabin Master, bespoke garden rooms and offices designed, manufactured and installed throughout the UK 


Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Full width garden office

This garden studio at the end of a recently built two bedroom house in Leyton, London, was designed by architect Joe Burke. It runs the full width of the back garden and the Shedworking staff were particularly taken by the horizontal design which works so well with the wooden facade.

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Wednesday posts are sponsored by Booths Garden Studios, the UK's No.1 supplier of zero maintenance and portable garden studios

 

 

Monday, June 29, 2026

Tiger reaches 30th show site milestone after Yorkshire expansion

Woodlands Home & Garden Group’s consumer-facing brand Tiger has reached a significant milestone with the opening of its 30th UK show site.

The latest site - opened at Sam Turner & Sons in Northallerton - joins a nationwide offline network spanning Scotland, the North of England, Wales, the Midlands and the Home Counties. Tiger now operates sites in partnership with British Garden Centres, Blue Diamond, Caulders, Dobbies, Yorkshire Garden Centres, Klondyke, Cherry Lane, alongside independent operators and standalone destination sites.

New sites launched this year sinclude Ashton, Basingstoke, Dundee, Grantham, Great Yarmouth, Hinckley, Linlithgow and Morpeth.

"The physical retail environment remains incredibly powerful for considered purchases like sheds and garden rooms," said Stuart Davison, Commercial Director at Woodlands. "Our research shows that while many consumers enjoy our online shopping experience, a lot customers want to see, touch and compare our quality buildings in the flesh."

The show sites run alongside Tiger’s digital platform which includes online configurators allowing customers to design bespoke buildings and a virtual showroom to browse the collection. 

Originally founded in Yorkshire over 110 years ago, the business is now owned via an Employee Owned Trust, employing more than 230 people across manufacturing, head office, logistics as well as retail.

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Monday's posts are sponsored by Smart Modular Buildings, the UK's best garden room company

 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Dickens's writing chalet saved for the nation

The future of Charles Dickens's shedlike writing chalet looks a lot brighter thanks to a major financial lifeline from The National Lottery Heritage Fund.

Set in the gardens of Eastgate House, just off Rochester's High Street, it will receive a £240,000 grant to help develop plans to restore the architectural treasure and open it up to the public. Medway Council is contributing £40,000, while project partners from the Rochester and Chatham branch of the Dickens Fellowship are contributing £5,000. 

Now more than 160 years old, this Grade I-listed structure, situated in Eastgate Gardens, is extremely fragile and at serious risk of being lost.

Dickens worked there on several of his novels including Our Mutual Friend, The Uncommercial Traveller, and his final, unfinished, work The Mystery of Edwin Drood. He also rehearsed there before his numerous public appearances and lined the second floor with mirrors to help him prepare.

The chalet was given to him as a present from actor friend Charles Fechter in 1864 when Dickens lived at Gads Hill in Higham. It arrived at Higham Railway Station on Christmas Eve 1864, in 94 pieces packed into 58 boxes, an early example of prefabricated design and was moved to its current location in Rochester in the 1960s.

The project will conserve and restore the Chalet where organisers plan to develop a programme of events for residents, schools, and visitors to explore Dickens’ creativity and his contemporary relevance as a social campaigner. If development plans are successful, they will unlock a further funding of £1.2m from the Heritage Fund.

Eilish McGuinness, Chief Executive, The National Lottery Heritage Fund, said: "I’m pleased we are adding the Charles Dickens Writing Chalet, the writing nook where he wrote his last novels in peace and tranquillity, to the writing heritage we’ve funded over the years."

Image: Nick Johnson/The Imageworks

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Wednesday posts are sponsored by Booths Garden Studios, the UK's No.1 supplier of zero maintenance and portable garden studios

 

 

Monday, June 22, 2026

Garden office with storage

A nice case study from Modern Garden Rooms who built this garden office with storage for a client in London. It replaced an existing garden shed with a much larger and more useful building for the compact garden, with an integrated shed for storing garden tools.
 
It's a 6m x 3m build combining its two most popular models, the concave garden room and the cube room. Inside there is a main room with an internal doorway leading to a smaller room at the back. The windowless shed/storage room was built to the front with its own access via a 'hidden' door. Features include 300mm decking and French doors.  
 

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Monday's posts are sponsored by Smart Modular Buildings, the UK's best garden room company

Friday, June 19, 2026

Friday Finery: Mirrored beach huts

You've got until June 30 to catch the three marvellous mirrored beach huts on show at the Worthing Fringe Festival. The  'A piECE of our Mind' installations is built by ECE Architecture, this is what they say about them:

The three miniature mirrored beach huts are playful, creative and deliberately rooted in place; designed to celebrate Worthing, spark curiosity, and invite people to see the town through a different lens. As they move across locations throughout June, they encourage residents and visitors alike to explore, pause, connect and take pride in their surroundings. 

The moveable huts were made with locally sourced materials including from Covers Timber & Builders Merchants in Bognor Regis, and will be auctioned for charity at the end of the month.

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Thursday, June 18, 2026

Work From Oval

While we are obviously very much here to bang the gong for shedworking and garden offices (and other microarchitectural marvels), Shedworking has always been a supporter of third place working, the idea that you don't have to be sitting in a 'traditional' office to get your work done (we were perhaps the earliest exponent of pubworking).

So we've been following with some interest how Surrey County Cricket club have trialled its 'Work From Oval' experiment this summer, encouraging people to come and watch some County Championship matches at the Kia Oval and bring their work along too. 

For example, tickets for the late April game against Essex cost a very reasonable £15 and more than 100 people took advantage of the offer, making use of the various wifi upgrades during pre-season and the set aside work areas with desks, which not only have access to power but just as importantly clear views of the game. 

“We’re determined to continue to grow the audience for the Rothesay County Championship and the team have been working on ways to try and encourage more people to come through the gates this year," said Surrey CEO, Steve Elworthy. “We know that many fans treat the Kia Oval as their second home and have been using the ground to ‘Work From Oval’ for many years and we wanted to encourage others to come along as well.”

The initiative is continuing to run through all Surrey men’s and women’s games during working week hours this summer.

Photo courtesy Surrey CC

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Thursday posts are sponsored by Cabin Master, bespoke garden rooms and offices designed, manufactured and installed throughout the UK