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For Britons seeking warmth, camaraderie can be as important as heat

With winter settled in and the war in Ukraine unsettling markets, energy prices are up across the United Kingdom. While the U.K. Health Security Agency is encouraging people to warm their homes to at least 64 degrees Fahrenheit, more than 3 million low-income households cannot afford to heed this advice.

In response, communities are setting up warm spaces all over the country. To avoid any potential stigma, they’re being presented as communal spaces where people can come to chat, rather than charitable offerings of heat or food. While the primary reason for going to a warm space or public living room is likely to be warmth, it’s the camaraderie and conversation that keeps people there.

Why We Wrote This

Energy costs are so high in the United Kingdom that many Britons are unable to heat their homes properly. So communities are setting up warm places where they can come, without judgment, to escape the cold.

String lights, boxes full of postcards to share a story, or a sign on the door that lists the top five David Bowie songs with the message, “Come in and argue” – there are many ways to get people to come out of the cold and into a public warm space, says Maff Potts, who founded social movement Camerados. The key, he adds, is to make sure they feel welcome and not judged.

“What gets people in is that it’s not a church. It’s not a charity,” says Mr. Potts. “There’s no fixing, no answer. There’s just permission.”

String lights, boxes full of postcards to share a story, or a sign on the door that lists the top five David Bowie songs with the message, “Come in and argue”: There are many ways to make people happy to come out of the cold and into a public warm space, says Maff Potts. The key, he adds, is to make sure they feel welcome and not judged.

“What gets people in is that it’s not a church. It’s not a charity,” says Mr. Potts, who founded Camerados, a social movement that’s been opening public living rooms in communities across the United Kingdom since 2015. “There’s no fixing, no answer. There’s just permission.”

And this winter, the need for warm banks – or warm spaces, as they are being called to remove any stigma – is high.

Why We Wrote This

Energy costs are so high in the United Kingdom that many Britons are unable to heat their homes properly. So communities are setting up warm places where they can come, without judgment, to escape the cold.

With the cold settled in and the war in Ukraine unsettling markets, energy prices are up. While the U.K. Health Security Agency is encouraging people to warm their homes to at least 18 degrees Celsius (64.4 F), more than 3 million low-income households cannot afford to heed this advice. According to analysis by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, around 710,000 households across the U.K. cannot pay for warm clothing, heating, and food, with approximately 2.5 million households – a fifth of all low-income households – going without both food and heating.

And with power prices hitting record levels and energy costs double what they were last year, warm spaces have popped up all over the country. To avoid any potential stigma, they’re being presented as communal spaces where people can come to chat rather than charitable offerings of heat or food. While the main reason someone would go to a warm space or public living room is most likely to be warmth, it’s the camaraderie and conversation that keeps people there. 

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