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Bringing
Back
Community
Living
New
trends
in
employment
and
lifestyle
show
that
working
from
home, be
it
within
homes or
in
bespoke
garden
offices,
has
become
ever
more
popular.
Seemingly
never
more so
than in
rural
England.
A report
by Tim
Dwelly,
Kath
Maguire
and
Frances
Druscatt
called
Under
the
Radar-
tracking
and
supporting
rural
home-based
businesses
highlights
the
following
facts:
-
Home
based
working
in
the
UK
has
risen
by
almost
3.3
million
in
spring
2004,
according
to
Labour
market
Trends.
-
766,000
people
work
from
home
in
the
145
English
rural
districts
(the
focus
of
the
report)
-
This
11.6%
of
the
rural
workforce
working
from
home
compares
to
8%
of
the
urban
workforce.
Facts
that
maybe
don’t
come as
such a
big
surprise
when you
consider
what
working
from
home in
a garden
office
could
offer.
The
internet
and
advanced
technology
mean
that
most
jobs can
be done
from
more or
less
anywhere.
What
better
place
than at
home in
a
bespoke
garden
office
building.
With
more
people
working
from
home
there
has been
more of
a demand
for home
offices
or
garden
offices
meaning
that
there
has
become
more
choice.
No
longer
do we
need to
run
cables
from the
house to
a
“make-do”
shed at
the
bottom
of our
garden
never
daring
to
invite
any one
in.
There
are now
some
stunning
examples
of
garden
office
buildings,
from
simple
log
cabins
to the
more
executive
bespoke
garden
offices
that are
double
glazed,
insulated
and so
secure
they are
literally
safe as
houses.
With
such
bespoke
garden
offices
being
able to
house
several
desk
spaces
within a
small
area
they are
simply a
pleasure
to work
in and
can
provide
space
for
meetings
and or
training.
Rural
living
has
always
had the
down
side of
the
commute
into
cities
and
larger
towns to
get the
higher
paid
jobs.
Having
made
that
choice
not to
live in
highly
populated
industrial
areas it
would
make
sense,
given
the
opportunity,
not to
commute
and so
work
from
home.
Kelly
Green,
who runs
a small
business
from her
home in
Norfolk,
told us
“I used
to live
in the
city in
a flat
above an
office I
rented.
A friend
told me
that she
had a
garden
office
so I had
a look.
I was so
stunned
by the
executive
look and
feel of
her
garden
office I
moved
out of
the city
and to
the
countryside.
I had my
garden
office
installed
in one
day with
business
broadband
and
independent
business
telephone
lines,
it was
so
simple,
and now
I really
can work
easily
from
home in
my own
garden
office
and life
couldn’t
be
better.”
-
56%
of
self
employed
people
are
home
based.
-
Nationally,
39%
of
small
businesses
are
home
based.
In
rural
areas
its
55%.
With
savings
on
building
and
office
rental
not to
mention
the cost
of
commuting
to and
from the
office
and
parking
it’s
easy to
see why
being
home
based
can be
such a
pull for
those
starting
out in a
new
venture.
However
it’s not
just
those
starting
up a new
business
that are
working
from
home but
established
long
running
businesses
too. The
space a
rural
area can
provide
compared
with
that
within a
city
must be
considered
a factor
along
with the
fact
that
farmers
have had
to
diversify
finding
the
“open
market”
and
imports
too much
to
compete
with.
More
likely
though
is that
we
simply
enjoy
rural
life and
village
communities.
With
more
people
staying
at home
working
in or
alongside
their
home in
garden
offices
it is
sure to
lead to
lower
crime
rates.
Cars
still in
garages
or
outside
of homes
and
evidence
that
some one
is at
home
putting
off
potential
thieves.
The
knock on
effect
being
more
people
wanting
to move
to rural
areas.
If the
rural
communities
increase
then so
too will
the
demand
for more
facilities
for
example
internet
access
and
conference
facilities
both of
which
could
potentially
revive
old
parish
or
community
buildings.
A larger
community
will
mean
that
more
schools
will
reach
their
target
intakes
and that
council
tax will
be
poured
back
into
such
schools.
With
more
people
at home
for more
time
they
will be
less
likely
to get
out the
car and
drive to
the
nearest
town and
will
therefore
frequent
the
local
shops,
pubs,
cafes.
By
spending
more
time in
and
around
the area
of their
rural
homes
people
are more
likely
to get
to know
“the
locals”
within
the
area. So
in turn
the home
workers
within
the
community
will be
reinforcing
the
community
and
making
it a
stronger
and
safer
place to
live.
-
60%
of
rural
home
workers
are
men
40%
women.
-
Most
people
working
from
home
in
1901
UK
Census
were
women.
Facts
that
show how
times
have
indeed
changed.
Men are
now more
than
ever
showing
an
interest
in home
life and
family
and we
are all
getting
a better
balance
with in
our
lives.
Mr A, a
home
based
executive
told us
“when
the
company
I worked
for
asked me
if I
wanted
to work
one day
a week
from
home I
wasn’t
sure how
it would
work, I
thought
it was
only
stay at
home
mums who
worked
from
home. I
couldn’t
believe
how much
more
relaxed
I felt
and soon
I was
working
three
days a
week
from
home. I
now own
my own
business
and my
wife and
I both
work
from
home in
our
garden
office.
It’s a
bespoke
building
in our
garden
that is
very
secure
and
comfortable
and best
of all
we
didn’t
need
planning
permission.
We have
since
had our
house
valued
and the
addition
of the
garden
office
really
had a
positive
effect.
We
couldn’t
be
happier.”
-
In
around
50%
of
cases
home
based
business
are
started
up
by
incomers
to
rural
areas.
The
authors
of the
report
felt
that
this
fact
should
be
encouraged
and that
the
government
needs to
do more
to
encourage
and
support
this. So
that
what has
started
as a
trend
will
mean
that our
precious
rural
communities
can and
should
now be
sustained
building
a better
future
for us
all. |