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Artist moves into rubbish skip in protest at ‘crazy’ London costs

NATALIE THOMAS

AN artist has built a home in a rubbish skip in London and plans to live in it for a year, seeking to draw attention to the “crazy” price of renting a room in Britain’s capital during a cost of living crisis.

Harrison Marshall, 28, moved into the specially-adapted skip on a patch of grass in Bermondsey, south London a month ago, explaining that it was the only way he could afford to live in the central area near where he works.

Returning to the city after a period abroad, he said he struggled to find somewhere to live given the shortage of housing.

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“As was the case with thousands of people across the city and across the country, the prices had gone crazy. Rent was mad,” Marshall said.

“And even if I found somewhere that was in my price zone, then there’d be 100 other people or so looking for that room.”

British consumer price inflation hit a 41-year high of 11.1% in October and remains in double digits, fuelling a cost of living crisis, as wages have failed to keep pace with rising food and household bills.

Artist Harrison Marshall poses inside the skip which he has converted into a home, where he intends to live in for a year, in Bermondsey, London, Britain, March 3, 2023. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

Marshall’s creative solution to the problem was to spend 4,000 pounds ($4,800) building a wooden hood with a curved roof and fixing it onto a skip. Inside, he has a small kitchen and a mezzanine bed space. “Skip House” is emblazoned in black across the classic yellow container normally used for builder’s waste.

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“The skip provided me the kind of opportunity to make my own tiny little house,” he said.

An arts charity lent him the land. He has a garden path leading up to an entrance ladder and a portable lavatory in the corner of the site. He showers at work, a 10-minute bike ride away, or the gym, and has access to water from a hose pipe from a neighbour’s property.

“All the neighbours are amazing, actually. Everyone’s very supportive. I’ve got neighbours coming and bringing homemade meals,” he said. “That’s a massive bonus to the whole project is just that this area seems to have a really good community.”



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By The African Mirror

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