MANY YEARS AGO, I admired some fine framed paintings in my friend’s home. His mother told me that she had borrowed them from a local library that loaned out paintings. The idea that a library loaned out anything apart from books and gramophone records was new to me. I have since discovered that as early as 1894, a library in St Louis (Missouri) loaned out tennis rackets and board games, and from 1904, paintings were available to be borrowed from a library in Newark (New Jersey).
Yesterday, 27 May 2026, while strolling through the relatively new Livat shopping centre in London’s Hammersmith, I saw a series of lockers marked “Library of Things”. It contained a range of household items and garden tools, all of which were available for hire at various costs per day. This library is run by an organisation called “Library of Things” (see: www.libraryofthings.co.uk/ ). To use the Library of Things, you must first register on its website. Then, you choose what you need to borrow, pay for the hire (sometimes it is free), and then get given a code that will open the locker containing what you wish to hire. The organisation’s aim is to reduce wastage and to save the environment from the packaging that accompanies bought items, and then the waste that follows when the item is discarded. Using the service allows people to get equipment that might be too large to store at home, and/or is used infrequently (such as for example carpet steam cleaners and sewing machines). By making the small payments to use equipment when needed, householders can save by not making the larger investments to purchase the items.
In principle, this set-up seems like a good idea.









