Finished House, Sussex: The Woodsman's Cottage, Grand Designs

Episode Information Sussex: The Woodman's Cottage

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Date Published:
11/06/2008

For 10 years, Ben lived in tents and caravans in a wood in West Sussex. As a woodsman, he needed and wanted to live among the trees, but now he wanted a house for some creature comforts. He invited volunteers to help him build one by hand, from the materials growing around him.

Cottage Beams, Sussex: The Woodman's Cottage, Grand Designs

Ben owned a third of the sweet-chestnut woodland and rented the rest. The house he designed was to be made almost entirely of wood, with an A-frame made of tree trunks, a wooden platform for a floor and oak shingles on the roof.

All the timber would come from the surrounding trees - sweet chestnut is a strong hardwood, ideal for this kind of building.

Because Ben coppices trees instead of removing them, roots and all, new growth would quickly replace the old.

The Vision

The house would comprise: a single large living room, rising all the way to the roof, including a kitchen area; one bedroom on the ground floor; and a bathroom. Ben came up with some simple drawings and appointed architect John Rees to advise him.

Volunteers were invited to come and stay in the woods and help build the house in return for food and drink and some tuition from master-carpenter Viv Goodings. With no builders' wages, and the wood being free, Ben aimed to build the house, complete with sun and wind powered electricity, for £25,000.

Natural Beauty And Strength

Building began in May, and Ben's ambition was to move in by the time the winter weather arrived. The hand-crafted approach meant taking time over details. For instance, much of the wood was being left in the round. This meant that it kept its natural beauty and strength, but special joints were required for fixing curved surfaces together. And the pace of work altered according to how many volunteers turned up.

The A-frame went up in a day - an extraordinary feat, involving hand-winching pairs of 30 foot ( nine metre) tree trunks. But filling in the frame with floors and a verandah, and adding rafters and internal walls, involved slow and steady work that lasted months. Then there were the 12,000 oak shingles, all hand-cut by Ben, to be nailed on to the roof.

Sleeping Indoors

In autumn, recycled newspaper insulation went under the floor and into the roof, and oak-edged boards were fitted on to the outside of the house. Then barley-straw bales, which had been bought from a neighbouring farm, were stacked in between the timber fame and the internal stud-work to create thick walls. Ben installed a wood-burning stove, bath and hot-water cylinder, and started sleeping indoors.

Cabling, wrapped in copper to proof it against fire and rodents, was run through the straw. Using clay from his pond, Ben built a fireplace and covered the internal lath walls with clay plaster. Finally, glass went in to the windows, the straw bales were covered with lime plaster, and the house was weatherproofed - just as the November storms arrived.

Window, Sussex: The Woodman's Cottage, Grand Designs

The Detail

The house is a hymn to wood. Inside and out, wood displays its beautiful variations of size, colour and texture. Pieces are fitted together with hand-crafted pegs. The oak shingles of the roof ripple with natural curves. The big arched window echoes the shape of house.



Light floods in and shadows of beams and laths move across the walls. Eventually, storage platforms will be installed high up at either end of the house.

The living-room walls, covered in lime plaster, are a gentle yellowish-cream. Lime wash mixed with iron oxide and turmeric has turned the bedroom walls red-orange. Some surfaces are curved, where the straw bales beneath the plaster had been shaped with a chainsaw.

A tall, curved clay fireplace mirrors the shape of the arched window. Curved niches for candles are set into the chimney breast.

Bathroom and kitchen have all Ben needs in the way of luxury. An enamel bath connects to the hot-water cylinder. Iron pots hang above a black Rayburn.

The house runs entirely off natural energy, and even some of the technology has recycled parts. Solar panels previously used in the Big Brother house provide electricity, which is stored in second-hand submarine batteries. Together with a few wind turbines, they will power Ben's lights, stereo and laptop. Rainwater and a nearby spring supply the taps. And soon the composting toilet will arrive.

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Comments

  1. http://www.ben-law.co.uk/ For more information visit here.
    Posted by N. T. Demir on 23/10/2008 01:35:41
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  2. Hi Grand Designs - I'm a big fan of the programme and I'm thinking of buying my Dad a boxed set of the DVD's for Christmas. In particular, I know he would be interested in the Woodsmans Cottage. Please could you let me know which series this is contained in. Many thanks Andrea
    Posted by Andrea on 22/10/2008 14:14:56
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  3. hey, im an apprentice carpenter, nearly quaified, this house is inspiring to the true nature of carpentry, or what I believe to be real carpentry. unfortunatly it is so hard to come by this kind of work. Ben is an inspiration and an exceptionally dedicated woodman, it would be an privilage to learn from him, I can imagine im not the only one, good luck ben hope all goes well in your new home. regards matt
    Posted by matt.m on 21/10/2008 20:29:13
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  4. hello ben, we were absoloutely intrigued and delighted with your house build and your way of life. we live in kent and wondered whether it would be possible to visit you sometime.......
    Posted by sue sherar on 08/10/2008 13:35:46
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  5. This house is utterly, breathtakingly beautiful. Something about it squeezed my heart and brough tears to my eyes. What an odd reaction, perhaps a response that remembers ways of living from times gone by. How I would love a house like this. Nicola
    Posted by Nicola on 07/10/2008 18:11:46
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  6. Answer to C P Yardley: you can watch this episode on DVD, it's Grand Designs series 3. It's well worth it, it's fantastic. Especially this episode, but some of the others too.
    Posted by Eolake on 04/10/2008 17:07:49
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  7. Out of all the Grand Design episodes so far, I found this the most inspiring. The quiet dignity and humility displayed by Ben, made me take a look at myself and my own use-it-up and throw-it-away lifestyle.
    Posted by Arthur in Oz on 02/10/2008 03:26:35
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  8. Is there any way to 'copy' this design (or similar)..... but get contractors to do it for me!:) Legally, what do I need to do, does anyone know, so I can do the same. It will be in Queensland rather than the UK if thats relevant.
    Posted by paul thompson on 30/09/2008 20:53:17
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  9. This was defintley the best grand design ever!!!!
    Posted by Orla on 27/09/2008 14:00:30
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  10. Of all the grand designs and in terms of sustainability and earthy design I think this has been the best of Grand Design. Ben and his family deserve the best considering their sacrifice. His design has been well thought out and executed with a good use of local materials.
    Posted by Rex from de land of Oz on 25/08/2008 09:19:26
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  11. Hi CP Yardley You might be able to watch it on 4oD: http://www.channel4.com/4od/whatson/index.html
    Posted by Lucy 4Homes Ed on 21/08/2008 21:31:12
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  12. Is it possible to buy a video of the programme on the Woodmans cottage?
    Posted by C P Yardley on 20/08/2008 17:27:59
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  13. I would like to see more programmes about Ben Law's house and other kinds of sustainable and low-impact build - eg earthships, earth-sheltered building, cob, rammed earth, strawbale, cordwood, timber frame, etc. I think these types of build could become very popular with people who care about the environment and their impact on the planet and wish to live lightly on it.
    Posted by Mari Shackell on 15/08/2008 17:26:40
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  14. Thought this was the best ever Grand Design. We are sick with envy.... We would like to do something similar by building a mud & stud house in our field in Lincolnshire - there are still a few traditional ones around here but not many. Feel this would be a worthwhile project but, oh the problems of planning... Still, nothing that is worth it is easy eh! Hope Ben and his family have many happy years in their lovely home.
    Posted by Sue on 12/08/2008 20:26:33
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