Budget Breakdown: An Architect Builds an Experimental Garden Studio for Less Than £5k
In the British countryside, Stirling Prize nominee Michael Dillon builds a tiny office as an exercise in low-carbon, low-cost construction.
Architect Michael Dillon has had an eventful year.
This month, the Sand’s End Arts & Community Centre in London, which Dillon codesigned as an associate at Mae Architects, was announced as a finalist for the Royal Institute of British Architects’ annual Stirling Prize, awarded to the UK’s best building. With its lightweight cross-laminated-timber structure and exterior bricks recycled from construction waste, Sand’s End provided an epiphany.
"It sparked a fire in me," Michael explains, "that there was a way to create architecture that was still really beautiful, but equally sustainable at the same time."
For much of this year, however, Michael was busy with a much smaller project. One which he not only designed himself, but also hand-built—and it kicked off the formation of his own firm, AOMD.
£556 Floor |
£880 Walls |
£632 Roof |
£1,197 External Cladding |
£706 Doors & Windows |
£97 Paint |
£120 Built-In Desk |
£40 Electrical |
£320 Foundation & Landscaping |
Grand Total: £4,548 |
Dubbed the Garden Studio, it sits on a gently sloping hillside at the edge of a protected wilderness in Tunbridge Wells, behind the renovated former council house that Michael shares with his wife, acclaimed artist Eleanor May Watson (who paints in the reclaimed motorcycle garage next door). But this isn’t just an architect’s studio. It’s also a kind of continuing experiment into how buildings can be made without so much waste and carbon.
Michael’s studio priced out at £4,548 (approximately $5,045)—a fraction of what traditional approaches would have cost. "A garden studio costs a lot. To buy something like this off the shelf, you're talking like £30,000 to £40,000 perhaps in the UK. And they're really clunky," he says. "I didn’t have that money, but I knew the material costs—and I knew that I could do it for less if I built it myself."
The Garden Studio is designed without any unnecessary concrete, toxins, plastics, or glues—instead, Michael favoried recycled and natural materials. Whenever possible, he removed membranes and linings to enable the building to be fully breathable. It’s also designed to be as low-carbon as possible, and to utilize local materials.
See the full story on Dwell.com: Budget Breakdown: An Architect Builds an Experimental Garden Studio for Less Than £5k
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