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Opinion
Home / The Country / Opinion

Kiwis need sheds, not carpeted ‘car bedroom’ garages – Glenn Dwight

Glenn Dwight
Opinion by
Glenn Dwight
Studio creative director and occasional writer ·The Country·
28 Mar, 2026 04:04 PM5 mins to read
Glenn Dwight is the studio creative director – regional at NZME and an occasional writer for The Country.
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Now that's a shed, or it could be a garage – the point is, it's proper. Photo / Pixabay, dtrays

Now that's a shed, or it could be a garage – the point is, it's proper. Photo / Pixabay, dtrays

There comes a moment after moving house when the taping, wrapping, lifting and shifting is done, and the real work begins.

The boxes are mostly unpacked, the kettle has found its permanent home, and you’ve finally located the charger for something important that was packed in a box labelled “miscellaneous”.

That’s when you start looking around and thinking about the things that still need sorting.

High on my list at the moment is the shed.

Now, technically, the house already has a garage. But like many modern homes, it isn’t really a garage at all.

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It’s what I like to call a car bedroom. You know the sort.

Carpet on the floor, plastered and painted walls, lighting that would make a dentist feel comfortable, and just one Porsche 911 poster short of looking like a teenage boy’s room from the 1990s. Possibly with a Baywatch poster as well.

A proper shed is a place where order and chaos exist in a strange but important balance.

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It’s somewhere you can keep that piece of wood you know will come in handy one day, and be confident it won’t disappear after someone decides it “looked like rubbish”.

It’s where a jar of screws sits beside an old ice cream container of nuts that don’t match, and nobody can remember where either of them came from, but throwing them away would feel like a terrible mistake.

Because the shed I remember from growing up was never tidy. It was a place where things happened.

There was always a bike in some stage of modification.

In my case, it was a Raleigh 20 that had been stripped down, repainted and customised with the kind of confidence that only a young teenager with access to tools can possess.

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Looking back, it was probably less engineering and more industrial vandalism, but at the time, it felt like serious work.

That’s the thing about a shed. It’s where you learn by doing.

You take things apart. You test ideas. And occasionally, you discover that putting things back together again is considerably more complicated than the original plan suggested.

I remember once deciding that Dad’s lawnmower needed a proper service.

The plan seemed simple enough. Strip it down, clean everything, put it back together and enjoy the quiet satisfaction of a perfectly running machine.

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What I learned fairly quickly was that taking a lawnmower apart is remarkably easy.

Reassembling it is where the real challenge begins. Sorry, Dad, but your new mower was great.

Then there were cars.

My first car was a Peugeot 404, which many people politely described as “interesting” and others described more accurately as an automotive error.

It had character, which usually means it required regular attention. But that car taught me a lot about engines, patience, and why we have mechanics.

Some people might argue I didn’t learn very much because my list of favourite cars still includes a BMW 2002 and a Trekka, two vehicles that share many similarities with vinyl records.

They’re expensive, slightly impractical and require a surprising amount of storage space. But I still dream of ownership.

Of course, the garage was not just about fixing things. It was also where a certain type of teenage creativity happened.

Before bedrooms became recording studios and laptops replaced amplifiers, the garage was where bands were born.

A few slightly geeky humans with guitars, a borrowed drum kit, and the vague hope that learning three chords might somehow impress the opposite sex (no personal experience here).

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In reality, the only people who noticed were the neighbours, who suddenly developed a deep appreciation for silence.

But that didn’t really matter, because the garage was the perfect place to try.

It was where you could spend time with your mates, talk, connect, make a lot of noise, and, for a moment or two, feel like rock stars.

It must have been important, because Apple eventually named an app after them: GarageBand.

Which is proof that somewhere deep inside Silicon Valley, there are still people who remember the magic of making noise in a garage and calling it music.

And in a way, that’s the real point of a shed or a garage. It’s a place to experiment.

A place where you can try something without worrying too much about whether it works the first time.

Where ideas can start small, projects can take shape slowly, and failure is simply part of the process.

That’s why so many big stories seem to begin in garages. Apple famously started in one. Hewlett-Packard did too.

There’s something about a small space filled with tools, half-finished projects and curiosity that seems to encourage people to build things.

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And while we might not all be launching global technology companies from sheds around New Zealand, the principle is exactly the same.

A shed is where someone learns how to weld. Where someone rebuilds an engine that may or may not ever run again. Where someone fixes a bike, builds a go-kart, or spends an afternoon figuring out why something makes a noise it definitely shouldn’t.

It’s a place where curiosity lives.

Which is why I’ve come to the conclusion that every New Zealander probably needs one.

Not a perfect garage with carpet and painted walls.

Just a proper shed.

A place where a project can begin simply because you’re curious about whether it might work.

Because every now and then, something that starts in a messy shed turns out to be a pretty good idea.

- Glenn Dwight is the studio creative director – regional at NZME and an occasional writer for The Country.

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