Garden renovation gets green light in lockdown activities
Sprucing up the garden has been voted the number one activity during lockdown a new survey has revealed. A poll of 2,000 homeowners found 86 per cent have conducted some form of DIY after a year of coronavirus restrictions increased the time spent at home.
And of those, more than half (56 per cent) did so in order to adapt to the pandemic, including 14 per cent adding a home office.
While 46 per cent completed some form of DIY in their garden area, 36 per cent updated the living room.
The kitchen was refreshed by 31 per cent, while homeowners were more likely to spruce up their main bathroom (25 per cent) than their own bedrooms (24 per cent).
Reasons for DIY projects included homeowners ticking jobs off their to-do list (41 per cent), to improve wellbeing (15 per cent) and to take their minds off the pandemic (17 per cent).
A further 13 per cent simply wanted to feel ‘in control’ while in the middle of a pandemic and 23 per cent felt a sense of achievement by completing DIY jobs.
Other tasks over the last year included people growing their own vegetables (13 per cent) and building more storage (12 per cent) in order to keep multi-use spaces tidy and clutter free.
The study was commissioned by B&Q, and the need for order and organisation in the home during lockdown was reflected in the brand’s annual sales figures as sales of storage rocketed by 24 per cent in the last year.
Home working and home schooling put huge pressure on space and privacy, leaving people carving up existing spaces using low cost, no mess fixes which resulted in unit sales of room dividers soar by 51 per cent.
And with the garden being the highest priority renovation, sales of outdoor rugs were up 11 per cent, statement outdoor tiles up 462 per cent and fairy lights up 56 per cent, as people tried to create indoor living outside.
It also emerged that renovations can be a source of positivity, as homeowners felt happy (36 per cent), content (36 per cent), proud (29 per cent) and calm (13 per cent) when thinking about the DIY jobs they had completed.
B&Q commercial director Paul White, said: “Being stuck indoors in lockdown was a challenge for us all but many reaped the benefits of home improvement projects from small tasks like adding storage to transforming rooms to meet new lockdown living needs.
“These projects delivered both practical solutions throughout COVID but also provided a much-needed distraction from the pandemic.
“We’ve seen how spending more time indoors has led to people falling back in love with their homes and discovering different ways to get the most out of them way after lockdown is lifted.
“With the nation’s confidence in DIY growing from strength to strength, we don’t expect this DIY boom to slow down anytime soon.” The survey also found the average homeowner took on nine DIY jobs in total over the last year. Renovation in order of priority in 2020 were: 1 Garden; 2 Living Room; 3 Kitchen; 4 Bedroom; 5 Bathroom.