Most men have a shed, but not like Sam Lanyon's.
Behind the doors of a workshop in Falmouth he creates weird and wonderful interactive objects, all stunning to look at and even more interesting to operate. Among Sam and his company's creations are the AutoWed machine, which performs fun (if not entirely legitimate) marriage ceremonies for a pound and has been described as 'part parking meter, part Cadillac, part cathedral'. He has also received numerous commissions from museums and schools for interactive installations.
Concept Shed, the company he formed in 2006 after training as an engineer, buys many of its components and parts from Rapid. A typical order includes everything from switches to syringes, sound modules to sleeving. 'I buy from Rapid because you only sell the useful things, and it is actually possible to find what you want,' Sam says. 'It is great to be able to search by part number online, which is impossible on some other suppliers' websites. Certain parts, like the illuminated vandal proof switches we buy, I can't get anywhere else'.
If ever there was a born inventor, it is Sam. 'I grew up without mains electricity and was home schooled, so spent my time pulling electronics apart and building things.' The things he and his team now build range from audio armchairs to educational exhibits for the RSPB and the NHS. Their latest is a coin-operated signage automata for the Tullie House museum in Carlisle. Suspended in the atrium, the 'Flying Reiver' directs visitors to various parts of the museum but it is a work worthy of a visit in itself.