Top 57 Quotes & Sayings by Kevin McCloud

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British designer Kevin McCloud.
Last updated on November 10, 2024.
Kevin McCloud

Kevin McCloud, is a British designer, writer, and television presenter. He has presented the Channel 4 series Grand Designs since its debut in April 1999.

I'm terrified of being poor, I always have been. It's growing up as a Methodist. I'll spend that bit of extra money to get a better seat on a train sometimes, because it's quieter and calmer, but I refuse to spend money on clothes.
The thing that I champion is sustainability. My terror is that suddenly we see it as a luxury, not an essential. That's a danger.
Building your own house is a primal urge, one of those universal genetic drives like the need to provide for your family. — © Kevin McCloud
Building your own house is a primal urge, one of those universal genetic drives like the need to provide for your family.
Living an environmentally responsible lifestyle can seem like a Scrooge-like list of don'ts. Don't take that flight, don't buy that car, don't eat those blueberries flown in from somewhere far-flung.
I cannot look at modern buildings without thinking of historical ones.
I've got lots of friends who are musicians, and there is a fair proportion of broken marriages and relationships as a result. You are on the move all the time. It's difficult if you have kids, and it's hard to make money unless you are in the premier league.
One mustn't mistake bling for excellence, just as one mustn't mistake quiet for mediocre.
I've forgiven all my enemies - even those who have stolen money from me.
I don't enjoy living in a white box flooded with light. I like shadows, small spaces, old furniture.
I was never a hugely successful theatre designer. I painted a lot of scenery and did the lighting, and my lighting business grew out of that.
When I left university, I idled around without focus for much too long.
I'm quite shy. Television presents an amplified version of yourself. When I'm on camera I'm pumping more adrenaline, I'm being a bit more engaging than I am in everyday conversation, but that's normal, isn't it? Otherwise nobody would want to watch.
I've got a farm in Somerset, and I think it's God's own country. I love it.
Life involves other people and it is a compromise.
I've had my fair share of colds, which last longer than they should and can cause wheezing, so I avoid people who are sneezing like the plague and am scrupulous about hygiene and hand-washing.
Building a house from scratch in the middle of a field is a bit like building a prototype car. As with all prototypes, if you're building a car you usually have the luxury of producing several prototypes before you arrive at the production line version - so the opportunity for changing things is quite rich.
I'm terribly fastidious. I like symmetry and neatness, but my house is as chaotic as any other family's. — © Kevin McCloud
I'm terribly fastidious. I like symmetry and neatness, but my house is as chaotic as any other family's.
Architecture was pretty much the sexiest thing to be doing from 1700-1800.
There's nothing you can do about busted ribs. You just have to wait for them to pop back into place again.
I don't look at what people do with their homes in terms of money, but the social and personal value of what they're trying to do and achieve.
Every breath we take as human beings damages the planet.
Luckily I have never missed a day's filming or work due to asthma.
I don't know whether other asthma sufferers find this, but I've noticed that even when I've got my asthma under control, I often develop another problem such as an ear, chest or sinus infection and sometimes even joint pains.
I'm really quite conscious of clothes and the way they fit and don't regret wearing anything. Not even the five-inch stack heels I wore with three-button high-waisters at comprehensive school. Regret is for wimps.
Self-builders are the adrenalin junkies of the DIY world; it's the equivalent of base-jumping off the top of the Gherkin to land in a paddling pool.
I spend a frightening amount of money on books.
A friend of mine once wrote a silly article about all these metrosexuals like David Beckham wearing sarongs, and she described me as a 'heteropolitan.' I don't know what that means. I think it was a joke.
Your home should be about enriching the daily experience.
As a property developer, I learned a long time ago to choose your battles wisely and that, unfortunately, compromise is a given.
There's no reason for your imagination to be fettered by money.
We are borrowing money from future generations. We are borrowing the carbon impact, the resource impact from future generations to get stuff cheap now. We have swept the dirt and dust from our society under the carpet - but this carpet is on other side of the planet.
I don't want anything that I buy to have done any harm to anyone or anything.
I admire anyone that follows the road less travelled.
I'm driven by issues, not driven to be political.
It's possible to be satisfied with a day's work or a cake, but a life... what is a life but a history of events badly remembered?
Building your own home is about desire, fantasy. But it's achievable; anyone can do it.
Every decently-made object, from a house to a lamp post to a bridge, spoon or egg cup, is not just a piece of 'stuff' but a physical embodiment of human energy, testimony to the magical ability of our species to take raw materials and turn them into things of use, value and beauty.
I am a big fan of long drop, composting toilets - I like the cycle of using waste. When you have experienced one and seen what comes out of the bottom, it is amazing stuff. It's the most beautiful, driest, sweet-smelling compost.
I hate negativity. I hate people who say the phrase 'I hate'. I really don't like the word 'hate.' Dislike, frightened of, terrified of, or yukky - but not 'hate.' — © Kevin McCloud
I hate negativity. I hate people who say the phrase 'I hate'. I really don't like the word 'hate.' Dislike, frightened of, terrified of, or yukky - but not 'hate.'
People have got to get over the fear of not being able to trust others. I come across people who are very successful in their own sphere, and really believe they can do it all themselves, but they can't.
A great deal of energy is wasted in hating people, and I can honestly say I've no wish to expend such a precious resource on being outraged about anyone.
Generally speaking, I think that if you do anything with commitment and passion, it will come good.
If you said to me, 'Lie down on that concrete floor and fall asleep,' I could do it. I can sleep anywhere at any time of day on any surface.
My favourite authors include Trollope and Dickens.
Building design isn't trendy.
I like the absurd and the surreal: the Coen brothers, Bunuel, Kubrick.
I'm not too fond of really cool design. I've got quite kitsch taste really, in things like tableware. I'm quite a sucker for 1930s pressed glass.
The more of your private life you put into the public domain, the smaller your private life becomes.
Because I live in the countryside, I want a building which encourages me to have a fully formed relationship with the environment. It gives me an opportunity to not just be inside or outside, but in a range of contexts.
I have a recurring nightmare that I wake up in a gutter with nothing. I've had it all my life. That's why I work, I think.
What happened in 2008 stopped people in their tracks. People stopped looking at their homes simply as commodities to exploit and starting thinking about how they might personalise that space and make them less bland and more autobiographical, and that's healthy, I think.
My father, an engineer, was the gentlest man I knew. — © Kevin McCloud
My father, an engineer, was the gentlest man I knew.
You cannot use the democratic process for the procurement of excellence.
If I welcomed people into my lovely home every week in the pages of a magazine, they'd soon see how incredibly dull it is. It's important to maintain a bit of mystique.
Sustainability is now a big baggy sack in which people throw all kinds of old ideas, hot air and dodgy activities in order to be able to greenwash their products and feel good.
The greatest architectural illusion is not Baroque fancy or Victorian flamboyant, but minimalism.
Awesome is loud but awe is quiet.
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