Thursday, April 09, 2026

Effects of working at home on mental health revealed in new study

A 14-year study of nearly 40,000 UK workers has shown that remote working helped men before the pandemic, harmed professional women, which then reversed as it became normalised.

The research from King’s Business School and published in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior, tracked people between 2009 and 2023, comparing periods before and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Dr Constance Beaufils and Professor Heejung Chung found that before March 2020, working from home was linked to better mental health for men across job types. For professional women, the opposite was true, their mental health worsened as homeworking became more common in their roles.

The researchers point to two pressures. In high-status workplaces, a “flexibility stigma” meant women working from home felt the need to prove their commitment by working longer hours and staying constantly available. At the same time, homeworking did not reduce their workload. Instead, it allowed professional and caregiving demands to overlap, without the boundaries an office provides as Professor Chung’s previous studies have shown. The result was not balance, but more work.

By contrast, women in lower-paid roles saw clear benefits when homeworking became available. With less control over their schedules, the added flexibility helped reduce strain.
From March 2020, this pattern reversed. As working from home became widespread and accepted, professional women began to see significant improvements in mental health, while the benefits for men weakened.

The researchers suggest this reflects a shift in workplace culture. As stigma reduced, women no longer needed to overcompensate when working from home. At the same time, men took on more unpaid domestic work post-pandemic, especially when working from home, which may have reduced the mental health gains they previously experienced and helped redistribute pressures at home.

"Working from home is not inherently good or bad for mental health," said Dr Constance Beaufils, researcher at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research, and associate at the King’s Global Institute for Women’s Leadership. "Its impact depends on who has access to it, the pressures people face at work and at home, and how organisations support it. Before the pandemic, those who stood to benefit most often had the least access. If flexible working is to reduce inequalities, it needs to be more widely available and backed by broader support, such as childcare.

Professor Heejung Chung, Director of the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership, added: "For years, working from home was seen as the solution to wellbeing. Our research shows it was making things worse for some, particularly professional women, who were expected to manage full-time work and care at the same time. What changed after the pandemic was not the policy, but the culture. Rolling that back now risks undoing those gains."

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

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

Jack Hargreaves' Out of Town shed

Many of you will have fond memories of Jack Hargreaves' television programmes such as Out of Town and the shed in which he presented them. In the short video below, Fred Dineage takes us round that shed and discusses its importance. Well worth a watch.

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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

Friday, April 03, 2026

Scammers targeting beach hut buyers

People desperate to own a beach hut along Kent’s 14 miles of coastline are being targeted by scammers, according to Canterbury City Council.

The con artists are listing beach huts in Tankerton that they do not own on auction websites like eBay and selling them for thousands of pounds, much cheaper than the going rate. The criminals are breaking the locks on huts and inviting unsuspecting victims to visit them while claiming they are unable to be there to show them round.

Cabinet Member for Economic Development and Inclusion and Coastal Towns, Cllr Chris Cornell, said: “The golden rule is if something sounds too good to be true, it generally is. As soon as we learned of people selling beach huts in Tankerton they do not own, we informed the beach hut owners and advised them to contact Kent Police and Report Fraud.

"We also notified the beach hut associations, so they could spread the word to their members. We would always advise beach hut owners to be vigilant for the potential for fraudulent activity such as this and to report any concerns they have to the police as swiftly as possible. Our Foreshore team is happy to provide advice on whether a hut sale is genuine if people contact us.

“While hut owners are permitted to sell privately and via whatever method they choose, our advice to prospective buyers is to only purchase huts through agents or the beach hut associations. Sadly, the main victim in scams of this type will always be the unsuspecting purchaser.”

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Thursday, April 02, 2026

George Bernard Shaw's writing hut Easter egg trail


There's an excellent Easter Trail at Shaw's Corner over the next few days featuring the great man's iconic writing hut. Visitors are encouraged to look for images of eggs around the grounds from today until Monday (April 6) from 10am until 12.30pm (last slot midday). It's  £3.50 per trail which includes an Easter trail sheet, bunny ears, and dairy or vegan and Free From* chocolate egg.

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

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

The Composer's Cabin: Chelsea Flower Show 2026

 

We're starting our annual look at the best shedlike atmospheres at RHS Chelsea Flower Show with The Composer’s Cabin designed by Martha Krempel and sponsored by London St Pancras Highspeed. 

It's one of the Houseplant Studios sponsored by Malvern Garden Buildings and aims to celebrate peatlands, wild boulder-studded moorlands, horticulture and music as well as garden offices. The cabin is set in a landscape inspired by West Cornwall and features subtropical planting that flourishes in the area. Here's what the RHS says about it:

Inside the cabin, whose quiet charm recalls a 17th century cottage, visitors encounter a Steinway baby grand piano surrounded by lush planting. An immersive soundscape evokes the unique acoustics of peat bogs, bringing this fragile habitat to life. On the roof are transplanted sections of peatland bog, with delicate sphagnum mosses and Eriophorum angustifolium (cotton grass). The result is a retreat where creativity is not imposed upon nature but composed in quiet dialogue with it.

The peatland planting will be returned to its natural habitat and a version of The Composer’s Cabin will be relocated to London St Pancras Station for a pop-up experience in June.

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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, March 30, 2026

Cottage N.1

Cottage N. 1 is an intriguing build from De Castelli that scooped a Wallpaper* Design Award in 2012. Designed by Filippo Pisan, they describe it as "a revisitation of the classic garden shed" with a corten steel structure and natural spruce cladding. "The result," they say, "is a multifunctional space that can be transformed into a beachside hut, mini garage for two-wheeled modes of transport, a nook for meditative getaways, or a micro-workshop for DIY projects."

Features include lights that come on when you open the door, and an internal 'ventilation system' made up of  raised wooden slatted floor and small perforations in the walls.

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Friday, March 27, 2026

Friday Finery: Chile shed

One of my oldest schoolfriends, Kevin Towl (I watched my first world cup football final at his house in Telford in 1978), now lives and works in Chile, and he has been kind enough to send Shedworking some photos of his latest project (a 'casita' translates as 'little house' but it's very much a shedlike atmosphere as you can see). Here's what he says about it:

After a few ups and downs my 'casita' is almost ready. Switching from one builder to another didn't help the process and I seem to have ended up with a child's drawing of an Irish pub. Anyway, the book shelves go in soon and I am looking for the perfect desk.





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Friday posts are sponsored by Warwick Buildings, manufacturers of outstanding quality timber buildings. Click here for more information