Category: Uncategorized

  • Repair-a-thon

    Repair-a-thon

    Sorry for late notice, but tomorrow (Tuesday, 9th June) is this month’s repair-a-thon, bringing in several groups and individuals to potentially help you to repair anything you could imagine! Come in between 6:30 and 8:30pm with your things and we’ll take a look with it.

    A person riding a bicycle
    Computers and mobile devices

    Among the cast, we have Yim from Sunflower Cycles and Matt from Control Alt Repeat – to manage all your cycling and digital issues, respectively!

    If you already have things, then it is common sense to keep them going as long as possible. If you don’t have things, then we might have something you can borrow instead of buying new, here at BayShare. You can borrow and return things, at BayShare, during any repair-a-thon event.

    Drill
    A folding camp chair
    Gardening tools

    Put it in your diary: Repair-a-thon happens every second Tuesday of the month, between 6:30 and 8:30pm.

  • Launch day!

    Launch day!

    Saturday was the day of our soft launch, ahead of Monday 1st June, which is when we officially open to the public.

    Cat Smith, MP (Lancaster and Wyre), as well as Councillor Colin Hartley JP, the Mayor of Lancaster, and Councillor Paul Stubbins turned up to be the first to see the new library of things and the first “things” to be catalogued for borrowing.

    Hop on down to BayShare, in person or online, to tell us what you’d like to borrow first!

    Read the full press release for our launch below, and many thanks to the Lancaster Guardian and Beyond Radio for covering the story.

    New community-run library of things opened at Lancaster’s White Cross Business Park

    A new Library of Things has opened its doors to the public at Lancaster’s White Cross Business Park this week. The community-run library encourages borrowing instead of buying items to save resources. 

    The new BayShare Library of Things will be a place where anyone can become a member and borrow tools and other items that are used only occasionally at a very affordable rate. The library is run by the local community initiative Lancaster and Morecambe Makers, who also run Lancaster Community Makerspace next door. 

    Bil Bas, a director of Lancaster and Morecambe Makers and founder of BayShare, explains: “There are lots of things from party or travel equipment to tools that people don’t use very often. So borrowing instead of buying makes a lot of sense. It saves money, storage space and reduces waste. A library of things makes this possible, at very low cost.” 

    Items that are already available to borrow from the BayShare Library of Things include various DIY tools, programmable robots, various trolleys, a unicycle, a travel cot, a dehumidifier, a sewing machine, a bat detector, a neon happy birthday sign, and a few dozen more things. Future plans include adding many more items to the list over the coming weeks, and potentially launching locker-based sublibraries in other locations. 

    At the opening celebration of the BayShare Library of Things, Lancaster Mayor Councillor Colin Hartley JP said: “By embracing the spirit of sharing, we make better use of resources and lessen the need for new things, collectively reducing consumption and waste and lightening our environmental footprint, whilst supporting everyone to access what they need.”

    “Sharing is not a new concept – it is what humans have done for millennia in order to survive as families, tribes and clans. An individual sharing an item can seem trivial, but it actually creates a powerful gateway towards a different mindset, a different culture and potentially a different future.”

    Cat Smith MP, Member of Parliament for Lancaster and Wyre, said: “We all have the occasional need for a travel cot, pet carrier, or power tool, but the full retail costs for these can really break the bank. Thanks to the BayShare team, being able to borrow items from the Library of Things for a few days instead will help people save money and reduce waste.”

    The library sees itself as part of a global sharing and repairing community and is one of a growing worldwide re-commoning movement. Repairing and reducing resource consumption is also at the heart of a monthly repair cafe that the Makerspace and BayShare host in collaboration with Lancaster and Morecambe Repair Cafe and Sewing Cafe Lancaster. 

    Nina Osswald, a director of Lancaster and Morecambe Makers, said, “The library is part of our contribution to tackling the climate emergency and cost of living crisis. We aim to reduce consumption and waste by making, sharing and repairing the things we use instead of buying new things that are often made far away. It’s also part of our wider effort of bringing people together and forging community bonds, whether it’s at the library, the makerspace or our monthly repair cafes. We hope to inspire others to do the same and help everyone live more sustainably.“

    At the launch event, the other directors of Lancaster and Morecambe Makers, John Barbrook and Tim Diamond talked about an ongoing laptop refurbishement and tech access project, and about the various opportunitities for making things from woodworking or weaving to 3D printing that Lancaster Community Makerspace offers.

    During a tour of the library on the launch day, Councillor Paul Stubbins said he was keen to sign up and borrow a sander for a flooring project this summer, and added: “This will be a very valuable facility in the community and will make a meaningful difference to people’s lives. Feeling a part of a supportive, sharing community gives energy, and this library provides people with the tools needed to accomplish tasks.”

    As a community initiative, BayShare has received funding from Closing Loops through the Pots of Possibility Fund, from Lancaster City Council, and from Walney Extension Community Fund.

    Before the opening of the BayShare Library of Things, research was undertaken by Ref/use Lab for Lancaster City Council, asking local residents what they would like to borrow from such a library. The researchers also collected information about other borrowing initiatives that already exist in the district. 

    Researcher Kiki Callihan explains, “We found that over 500 items were already available from community groups and organisations – but there wasn’t a system for making the items easily searchable. So BayShare was conceived as a better way to find and borrow what was available from the various groups.” 

    Alongside the BayShare Library of Things catalogue, the website includes a lending directory that lists other lending initiatives in the area. These include a wide range of organisations and items, from Lancaster City Council’s gazebos, tables and chairs to Dolphinholme Party Kits and Morecambe Bay Slings who lend baby carriers. 

    Items can be borrowed from and returned to the BayShare library at Harpers Mill, White Cross Business Park. New users can sign up as library members at bayshare.uk or find out more in person during the library opening hours, Mondays 6:30-8:30pm, Wednesdays 6:30-8:30pm and Saturdays 11am-1pm.

    2026-05-30 BayShare launch with VIPs and other guests
    Staff and visitors, outside BayShare, showing off some of the first items in the library