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Wednesday, 9 October, 2002, 18:59 GMT 19:59 UK
Dylan's poetic retreat is repaired
Dylan Thomas's writing shed
The shed will be taken down in sections
A shed in which Dylan Thomas wrote some of his most celebrated works has been dismantled ahead of a �20,000 renovation project.

The shed doubled up as an inspirational workshop for the writer, who used it to pen Under Milk Wood.

Now the shed - which was most recently used as a garage - will be given a facelift ahead of the 50th anniversary of the writer's death.

The small writing shed sits perched high on the clifftop above Laugharne, the picturesque township in west Wales where Thomas lived with wife Caitlin.


Caitlin used to lock him in there between two and seven to write, because she knew they needed the money

Lorraine Scourfield, boathouse curator

The structure once appeared in one of Thomas' poems, described as a "sea-shaken house on the breakneck of rocks".

Around 25,000 tourists a year descend on the Boathouse each year but many more visitors are expected in Laugharne for next year's celebrations.

The shed is being spruced up part of a �100,000 programme of general repairs being carried out at the nearby Boathouse over the next few months.

Lorraine Scourfield, curator of the Boathouse, said: ""The shed was where he would retreat from his family to have peace to write.

"The view is superb - he got a lot of his inspiration from there.

Dylan Thomas
Dylan Thomas died 50 years ago next year

"The story is that Caitlin used to lock him in there between two and seven to write, because she knew they needed the money."

It is the first time the shed will have been moved from its position.

Part of the stone wall alongside is also being taken down and rebuilt.

Carmarthenshire County Council's Arts Manager Phil Alder said: "The Boathouse and writing shed are important cultural assets and a popular tourist attraction."

"The writing shed is being removed because it is in a precarious position for work to be carried out on site.

"We will also be looking at the supporting steel posts while the shed is in the workshop," Mr Alder said.

The work will begin on Wednesday and is expected to last two months.

The shed will be removed from its stilts and taken in sections to a workshop in Llangain, Carmarthenshire.

The contractors will carry out the work with tongue and groove made in exactly the same way as it was for the original shed, and rotten floorboards replaced with wood from that period.

All the original furniture has been restored and removed from the shed until the work has been completed.

The renovation programme is being supported by Carmarthenshire council, CADW and the Wales Tourist Board.

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BBC Wales' Rebecca John
"Fans of the poet hope the shed will be restored to its former glory"

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