A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin, beach box or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box above the high tide mark on popular bathing beaches. They are generally used as a shelter from the sun or wind, changing into and out of swimming attire and for the safe storing of some personal belongings. Some beach huts incorporate simple facilities for preparing food and hot drinks by either bottled gas or occasionally mains electricity. BBC accessed 17 February 2008
An April 2021 report provided an update on this category: "the average asking price for a beach hut in Britain has shot up from £25,578 to £36,034" in a single 12-month period.
Today there are believed to be around 20,000 beach huts in the U.K. Locations where beach huts can be seen include Lowestoft, Southwold, Walton-on-the-Naze, Frinton-on-Sea, Abersoch, Langland Bay, Rotherslade, Rustington, St Helens, Isle of Wight, Tankerton Slopes and Mersea Island. Locations in other countries include Wimereux, spectacular colorful picturesque in Cape Town, South Africa, Nesodden and Brighton and elsewhere around Port Phillip.
Holhuashi are small Maldivians resting places usually found only in the Maldives. These small beach huts can be found near beaches or harbours.
They had evolved from the wheeled used by Victorians to preserve their modesty. George III gave royal approval to the new fashion when he took a medicinal bath at Weymouth to the musical accompaniment of 'God Save the King', while Queen Victoria installed one at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight in the 1840s.
Felixstowe in Suffolk is believed to have had beach huts from at least 1891.
In the early 20th century, beach huts were regarded as "holiday homes for the toiling classes", but in the 1930s their image revived, George V and Queen Mary spent the day at a beach hut in Sussex, and other owners have included the Spencer family and Laurence Olivier. During World War II all UK beaches were closed, the reopening in the late 1940s and 1950s led to resurgence of the British beach holiday and the heyday of the Beach Hut.
While many beach huts were former fishermen's huts, boat-sheds or converted bathing machines, some of the earliest purpose built beach huts in the UK were erected at Bournemouth, either side of Bournemouth Pier in 1909. Designed by F. P. Dolamore, Bournemouth's Borough Engineer, they were offered for hire for £12 10s per year. Before World War I, 160 huts styled like bungalows were initially built. Today, Bournemouth features around 520 Council-owned and 1200 privately owned huts. Their style varies from traditional, wooden, shed-like constructions to ultra-modern concrete terrace huts such as the 1950s Overstrand beach huts at Boscombe. These redesigned by Wayne and Gerardine Hemingway, founders of the Red or Dead label, as Beach Pods for the Surf Reef opened in Autumn 2009.
Artist Tracey Emin sold her Whitstable beach hut to collector Charles Saatchi for £75,000. This hut was also destroyed by fire when the warehouse where it was stored burnt down.Hickman, Martin. Seaside scramble: Britain's beach hut love affair, The Independent, July 31, 2006. Accessed September 14, 2015.
In April 2011, Bournemouth Council obtained planning permission to site a beach hut "chapel" on the sand to host wedding and civil partnership ceremonies. The "super beach hut" is located on Bournemouth's beach under the West Cliff lift.
The Truck Surf Hotel is a five-room bed-and-breakfast built onto a truck, which serves the surfing community by moving from beach to beach along the coasts of Portugal and Morocco in a weekly cycle.
Notable huts
See also
External links
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