Kevin McCloud on 25 years of Grand Designs: ‘It’s become me and I’ve become it’

The genial presenter reflects on a quarter of a century of clever, creative and sometimes ‘bonkers’ build projects. By Lisa Salmon.

With heroes in the shape of hard-working builders and clever designers, villains like mud, rain and running out of money, and a happy ‘home of your dreams’ ending – Grand Designs has all the ingredients for a fantastic story.

And for the Channel 4 show’s presenter Kevin McCloud, who’s guided us through intrepid homeowners’ attempts to create showstopping and quirky homes for the last 25 years, it’s a story that’s become part of his own.

“It’s become me, and I’ve become it,” declares McCloud, 65.

“I think it’s one of those big adventures we all imagine we might go on, even if we don’t. And it seems to tease out every human emotion, every human drive, the good and the bad. And that, I think, is why people watch – it’s storytelling.

“We have villains in the form of mud and money and rain, and then there are the heroes – the craftspeople, builders, inventors and engineers – who are just trying to do good stuff, and in that sense it’s no different to listening to somebody tell a story in a tribe 3,000 years ago, sat around a campfire.”

Now, 25 years since the show was first aired in 1999, McCloud is presenting a new series, preceded by a 25th anniversary special episode which took viewers through some of the show’s greatest and greenest self-build journeys.

Cementing the Grand Designs silver jubilee is a new book, Grand Designs At 25, featuring the most stand-out builds, chosen by McCloud.

He thinks the book’s turned out “wonderfully well” but hesitates to go as far as saying he’s proud of Grand Designs and what he and it have achieved over a quarter of a century, instead opting to say he’s “at peace with it”.

“I don’t see myself as any different from the audience. We all love design and making stuff and building and architecture and construction, and we all love, in a way, the mud and seeing something change for the better,” McCloud reasons.

“When I say I’ve made my peace with it, what I mean is I have no distinction. I just happen to be on that side of the camera, but we’re all sharing the same love and enthusiasm for the same things.”

So, what does the father-of-four think has changed most during the show’s 25 years?

He says architecture is much more accessible than it used to be, and adds: “Sustainability has become central to the agenda. It wasn’t part of government policy 25 years ago, but it now is.”

Costs have of course risen, and – often as a consequence of that – houses are taking much longer to build, McCloud observes. Aside from general inflation, he says the biggest price rises have been for land, and the increased cost of building materials as a result of the pandemic and Brexit.

“So 15 or 20 years ago, to build a decent self-build home from the slab up would cost about £3,000 per square-metre, and that was doing a nice job,” says McCloud, “Now it would be £4,500-£5,000 per square-metre. So in 15 years, it’s gone up by 50%, but the big hikes have happened in the last 10 years.”

Despite the price rises, people aren’t cutting corners on their Grand Designs.

“They’re thinking their way out of trouble,” McCloud explains. “Designing better buildings, making them a bit smaller, being careful and clever. But they’re taking much longer, that’s the trouble.”

He estimates that in the past, on average it took two to four years to build a Grand Designs house. “Now it’s taking four to six years, and all the projects we’re planning to air this year, it’s like, when is it going to be ready? So that’s had a big impact on us.

“What people are doing is trying to build for the same money, so they’re trying to do as much of it themselves as they can. They’re trying to rationalise their designs and preserve quality, and they’re taking forever.”

Another change he’s noticed has been the “increasing Americanisation” of housing, and this ‘bigger is better’ ethos is linked to a major bugbear of McCloud’s…

“I know people, when they build a grand design, often think the word ‘grand’ in the title refers to the size of the building – it’s got to be huge. And I didn’t used to have to do this, but I now go to great pains to say to people, ‘grand’ is all about the vision,” he explains.

“If you don’t have a vision for either the design or the technology, or for pushing boundaries, or trying stuff which nobody’s done before, then we’ll probably be less interested to make a programme.

“Size isn’t everything – size is almost irrelevant. It’s about the grand scale of imagination, not physical space. I think the one thing that architecture has shown me over my life is that size does not equal space.”

For example, you can create a small building with a lofty ceiling and “a view of the heavens that gives you contact with infinity”, he says, or a well-designed and ergonomic house can become “what seems like the most spacious home as a result”.

There’s no particular Grand Designs project that stands out above all others for McCloud, but he points out: “My favourite ones are always the most intriguing, difficult, the longest, the ones that are complex in terms of how they’re brought into being, but sometimes the simplest in design.”

He can’t deny that sometimes the projects are “a bit nuts” – but that is part of the lure.

“Sometimes I look at the project dispassionately and think I’ve got a job to communicate this idea without making it sound bonkers. But it’s entertaining if it is slightly bonkers.

“On the one hand, you want to make stuff accessible to viewers,” he adds. “On the other hand, so much of Grand Designs is about portraying eccentricity and people moving to the margins of society and doing their own thing. It’s important to remember that what they’re doing is a bit nuts, and the rest of us are at home on the sofa.”

And it’s hard not to admire people for following their dreams, even if their visions are a bit “bonkers”.

“There are plenty of people not suited to building their own home – it requires huge reserves of patience and stamina and tolerance, and you need to be a very adept human being.

“Of course, the vast majority of our viewers are not ever going to do this – but that’s not why they’re watching. They’re not watching because it’s a manual, they’re watching because they’re trying to understand the journey,” says McCloud.

“But I think most people are watching just for the craziness of it. Just for the, ‘What are they going to do next?’.”

The new series of Grand Designs starts on Channel 4 on Wednesday, September 25.

Grand Designs At 25 by Kevin McCloud is published by White Lion, priced £28. Available now.

Grand Designs Live is at the NEC in Birmingham from October 2-6.

As Grand Designs Turns 20 Kevin McCloud Shares his Favouite Simple Builds

grand design favourite builds

From an underground bolthole in Peckham, to an eco-build on the Isle of Skye, Luke Rix-Standing discovers them all.

Television isn’t famous for job security, unless, that is, your name is Kevin McCloud. The veteran presenter has fronted Channel 4 property programme Grand Designs since its inception in 1999, and he has no intention of quitting anytime soon. “It’s become me,” he says, “I don’t even question it.”

In 20 years, McCloud has seen plenty of structural success stories, but also his fair share of domestic duds. “The real horror shows are the ones that never make it to the screen,” he says, “out of the 200 or so projects we’ve filmed, there have been maybe eight or 10 that we’ve had to abandon after one day of filming, after investing so much time and money.”

With more projects under his belt than most architects, McCloud knows a thing or two, because he’s seen a thing or two. “People fall down because they fail to prepare,” he says. “The design, the detail, the fine drawing – all that stuff needs to be done before it touches the sides.

To celebrate two decades of Grand Designs, here’s McCloud’s favourite simple builds from his time on the show…

grand design favourite builds

Lucie Fairweather – Suffolk, Season 10

Lucie and her partner Nat McBride bought this plot in Woodbridge in 2006, and were granted planning permission in 2007. Nat was diagnosed with cancer and passed away a year later, but Lucie saw through their shared vision of building a house that was as aesthetically attractive as it was environmentally sustainable.

Kevin says: “I’m really fond of these small, inexpensive projects – they’re more important as Grand Designs, than the big, show-off things people often think of. It’s here that the innovation happens, when people push with small budgets to deliver great experiences.”

“Lucie’s was just fantastic. It was a wonderful story about redemption, and about her taking her late husband’s vision and building a house for her small children. It was tinged with tragedy and sadness, but also with the tremendous friendship of Jerry Tate, a great friend of her and her husband’s. He not only designed the home for her, but held her hand through the whole process.

“It was an exemplary, three bedroom suburban home, but Lucie is a primary school teacher and she didn’t have a lot of money. The takeaway is that it’s not about buying stuff – if she can do it, anyone can.”

grand design favourite builds

Rebecca and Indi Waterstone – Isle of Skye, Season 12

An ultra energy-efficient, 90 sqm home of the Hebridean island of Skye, residents Rebecca and Indi pay just £50 a year in bills, despite the exposed location and the bitter winters. An exceptionally well-organised project, it took them 10 years to fund and just nine months to build.

Kevin says: “I loved this project for a lot of reasons. The Isle of Skye is just beautiful, and when we filmed it, the island was basking in sunshine while the rest of the country spent a summer in the rain. I could drink whiskey, have fantastic food, and see fantastic wildlife – whales, sea eagles, skuas…

“In the midst of it all was this tiny little jewel – an example of how to be sensitive to beautiful landscape, but contemporary as well. It goes to show that if you go somewhere and invest in it – build a house, live there, and make a contribution to the local economy – people respect you for it.

“The Isle of Skye is full of holiday lets owned by people that don’t live there, but Indi and Rebecca moved to live there all year round. Objections to their planning application were from people that didn’t live there, who wanted the place to remain populated by picturesque crofters’ cottages. Anyone who lived on the island loved what they were trying to do.”

grand design favourite builds

Monty Ravenscroft – Peckham, Season 5

A £220,000 home in South London with a sub-subterranean floor, this inventive build features a 10 sqm retractable glass roof, an LED light fitting that doubles as a shower, and a bed that slides away, revealing a bath. Construction wasn’t quick, but planning permission took two and a half years.

Kevin says: “Monty’s an actor and musician, so he’s a bit of a Renaissance man, and he built this very cheap house in South London for himself and his wife Claire. It was a long time ago now – during filming Claire was expecting a baby who’s now a young man.

“It’s a great project about one guy experimenting with all the ideas he’s ever had, with so much excitement. Monty was such a bundle of energy and so lovely to be around. He collaborated with an architect called Richard Paxton, himself a great inventor and a very inspirational man. He sadly passed away, so whenever I think about Monty’s project, I think about him.

“It’s a highly personal project for me, and it demonstrated that you don’t need much money. You need a bit of guts and an inventive mind, and if you haven’t got an inventive mind, find a mate who has. It’s not about reaching for the chequebook to solve a problem, it’s about reaching for the pencil and figuring problems out.”

grand design favourite builds

Theo and Elaine Leijser – Stirling, Season 6

A cedar-clad home in central Scotland overlooking the picturesque Campsie Fells, Theo and Elaine used clever design to funnel all the views from their house onto the fells, and away from a nearby main road.

Kevin says: “This project was all about delivering the experience of big, expensive architecture at a small scale. It was a beautiful, quick-to-put-up little box built onto a hill, and it had this amazing gallery above the ground floor.

“Whenever you were at the front of the house, you saw this fantastic arrangement of landscape and nature, because of the way the building was organised. It had this lovely little corridor from the kitchen that was low, narrow and compressed, and then suddenly the living room released you.

“It comes back to that point about shopping – it’s to do with the building organising your life and your daily activities in a way that brings you joy.”

Kevin McCloud will be appearing at Grand Designs Live at The NEC, from October 9-13, 2019. For more information and tickets visit www.granddesignslive.com

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