

HOMES MEAN BUSINESS was held on March 17 2006 at Bristol's Watershed centre. The conference was jointly organised by Live Work Network and the Commission for Rural Communities to explore the needs of home based businesses outside the big cities.
At the event, the Commission launched a report produced by Live Work Network: Under the radar, tracking and supporting home-based businesses (available here in downloads)




Roger Turner (left), head of skills and enterprise at the Commission for Rural Communities, summarised the findings of our report and other relevant research. 'Choosing to ignore the contribution to the economy made by home-based working in rural England is like ignoring the contribution of Glasgow and Birmingham combined. At 600,000, rural home businesses have a workforce the size of those two cities combined, or the size of the total labour force of England’s farms.'
John Passmore (left), leading Ross-on-Wye's market town initiative in Herefordshire, explained how a live/work project is being pursued at Ross to create a focus for the town's renewal. Although there are very high levels of home working in the area, the sector remains very much hidden away. Learning lessons from places like Penzance, Ross hopes to use live/work property and a self-financed hub centre as a catalyst for wider economic realignment.


During the break, delegates suggesting actions for government and other agencies at the event's Ideas Area. Their contributions will be included in our forthcoming paper Home enterprise - ideas for action.
In the afternoon, Tim Gray, estate surveyor for the Duchy of Cornwall, revealed plans at Newquay in Cornwall to create not only a live/work quarter in the 2,000 home extension being developed there, but also homeworking-enabled community. Susheel Rao, author of EcoHomes and adviser to the Duchy, explained how use of the home as workspace has been underestimated as a sustainability factor until now.