The Future £21,000 Living Home Pods

A former Rolls-Royce engineer is trying to 'conker' the housing crisis by creating £21,000 pods inspired by the traditional British playground pastime.


Chartered Engineer Jag Virdie, 50, claims to have found the perfect solution for young people returning home after university with his conker-inspired design.

The pods can be installed in parents' back garden in just one day and function as an independent living space for young adults as they look to jump on the housing ladder.

The spherical structures, called Conkers, measure almost 13ft (3.9m) in diameter and are made entirely out of materials sourced in Britain.

Several of the pods can be fitted together to create space for a double bed, storage for clothes, a kitchenette and even an en-suite bathroom with a toilet and shower.


Mr Virdie also envisages them as a granny flat for elderly relatives wishing to maintain their independence, or a space that can also be customised for glamping, a bar to entertain friends or even a science lab.

The father-of-two, from Wistaston, Cheshire, said: 'I envisage that people will look to live in The Conker as their home.

'The prices start from £21,000 plus VAT and then you can choose how you want it kitted out.


'For an office space we have designed a three-metre long desk with drawers and a deployable table.

'I currently use the prototype as my office and for when people come and see me.

'You can have it as a conference room with seats, a round table and a projector.

'We have a glamping range where you can have a Conker with bunk beds, or single beds and even a double bed. They can sleep a young family of four.

'You could connect a number of Conkers together to form a unique living spaces with bedrooms, living room, kitchenette and a bathroom.


'We're actually talking to a couple about providing an Alzheimer's facility for their back garden.

'This would allow them to keep a loved one close by while allowing them keep their freedom.

'It's early days for that though and there's a lot of research to go into it.' and the Bath Pod.


The idea of creating the Conker as a potential living space came to Mr Virdie after speaking to a friend about his daughter who was still living at home.

From there, he revisited an old design of his children's tree-house, which they had also called 'The Conker', and developed the idea from there.

The new generation Conker is light years away from a tree-house and his first two orders will serve as glamping pods that will blend perfectly into their environment 'like a chameleon'.

Mr Virdie, who began his career in engineering and automotive design at Rolls Royce, said: 'The independent living idea came to me following a discussion with friends.

'Their daughter is at the university in her home town and she has decided to stay at home for financial reasons.

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'They want her to have a real taste of independence - to come and go as she pleases, to cater for herself and do her own housekeeping, which isn't easy when they're sharing more than a front door.

'An ideal solution would be a 'granny flat' set-up, but this is expensive and a rather permanent solution to what all parents hope will be a temporary issue.


'Years ago I designed a suspended tree-house for my children - a perfect sphere we hung from a large tree at the rear of our garden which we called 'The Conker'.

'I wondered if something similar couldn't be created to serve as a self-sufficient living space for a student or first-jobber.

'I started drawing and came up with the next generation Conker, which does everything you want and looks beautiful too.'

Mr Virdie has optimistic projections for the year ahead and hopes with each order he'll be able to create numerous different designs with different usages.

Mr Virdie said: 'The business is a brand-new start up and we are just in the process of completing our first two orders.

'The Conkers we're currently making will sit on the edge of a river at a glamping site.

'Each Conker is individually styled to suit the environment.

'We can adapt it and create many different exteriors so that the Conker blends into its environment like a chameleon.

'The foundation only requires four anchor points to the ground so they can be put on even or uneven ground.'



One of Mr Virdie's main aims was to make sure the Conker had 'rock-solid environmental credentials' which means they are designed to last forever and even harvest water.

All materials are sourced in the UK and the pods themselves were designed and assembled in Cheshire.

Mr Virdie said: 'It was important that they had absolutely rock-solid environmental credentials.

'As the Conker is made of aluminium and recycled plastic it has a long service life.

'Because of the spherical shape of the Conker when it rains all of the water drips down the sides, where it can be harvested and stored in tanks.

'This could then be purified and reused in the shower or the kitchenette.

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