'We moved in with 17 strangers so we wouldn't be lonely' - why co-housing is on the rise
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'We moved in with 17 strangers so we wouldn't be lonely' - why co-housing is on the rise2 hours agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleCharlotte CoxSouth West Investigations BBCJohn and Nikki among 14 of of the other residents who have made Berry Park in Devon their home When Nikki Little and John Porter retired, they considered buying a bungalow for just the two of them.Instead, they invested in a £1m house tucked away on Devon's rugged and remote Hartland Peninsula - and looked for a community of like-minded people to join them.Now they live with 17 other people, aged four to 70.Co-housing is gaining popularity in the UK, says the UK Cohousing Network - in a post-pandemic world where loneliness, the housing crisis and costly care are forcing a drive for new solutions.Nikki and John say there is always something to do at Berry Park "In the future I was probably going to die first and I didn't want Nikki to be on her own," John explains."Because we're a childless family it just seemed like a natural thing to do - to form a community where Nikki could be looked after in a few years' time, after we've looked after this community."Berry Park receives "weekly inquiries" from people considering the lifestyle leap to co-housing, in which residents live in owned or rented lodgings clustered around a shared space and common facilities like gardens, allotments and dining areas. There are more than 120 co-housing developments either completed or in development and nearly 2,000 names on a national waiting list looking to join one, according to Owen Jarvis, CEO of the UK Cohousing Network.Berry Park near Bideford comes with six acres of land and the residents have built a pond which is already brimming with wildlife "We also have landowners bringing forward sites and asking for people interested in developing co-housing on their land - that's probably the biggest recent change," adds Jarvis.He s...





