The ultimate birdhouse: Huge cedar wood mansion comes with 103 'luxury' rooms, fly-by tunnels and even a swimming pool
By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 3:01 PM on 1st February 2011
This hotel is the height of luxury - if you're a bird. Complete with 103 rooms and a 'swimming pool', it is constructed from cedar wood and scales an amazing nine feet in height.
The birdbox de luxe also boasts Victorian architecture and fly-by tunnels, the brainchild of a former builder.
John
Loose, 46, has been making the specialist accommodation for our
feathered friends for five years now and has a range which can set
bird-lovers back anywhere between £1,000 and £15,000.
The one above, decorated with the Canadian flag, is the Toronto specialist's most impressive yet. But
all his creations have proved a big hit, attracting huge flocks of
starlings, sparrows and other birds seeking warmth away from the winter
chill.
Mr
Looser, from Toronto, said since he created his first bird mansion five
years ago people have been flocking to get one themselves. He retired after 20 years through injury but regularly gets orders for his creations from everywhere from the UK to Australia.
The houses are a big hit with the birds themselves, attracting huge flocks of starlings, sparrows and other birds seeking warmth away from the winter chill
Mr
Looser, who was a builder of human houses before retiring after 20
years, said he had orders for his creations from everywhere from the UK
to Australia
'I build them in my kitchen from scratch, at first using wood from an old barn but now using cedar wood.
'The
first ones I made I kept to myself, the birds love them, especially the
sparrows and blue martins. They are warm and high enough off the ground
so they don't get any trouble.
'The
biggest one I have built has 103 rooms, 32 dormer windows and is nine
feet by nine feet. It also has a purpose-built fly-through tunnel in the
middle, which the birds seem to really love.'
John said watching the birds using his mansions was the greatest compliment of his work he could have.
He said: 'There are birds living in them right now, I have even seen mums bringing up their chicks in them.
'Watching
the birds has also helped me adapt them to make the mansions better.
One day I saw them playing in a puddle that had formed on one of them.
'The next one I built I added a swimming pool in the roof and they haven't stopped using it.
'My
inspiration for the much of the architecture is the Victorian age and I
love European architecture. In the future I'd like to do a replica of
some of the great buildings you have in England.'
John
said that demand for the mansions meant that he was in talks to
hopefully produce flat-pack versions so that bird lovers could recreate
his work.
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