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(Q) How many cuppas does it take to build a house? (A) 9,500

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Published Date:
26 November 2007
MOST people will agree that nothing gets done without a cup of tea.
From climbing out of bed in the morning to making it through the busy working day, a cuppa helps keep Britain on its toes. But now a study has revealed exactly how much tea it takes to get a job done.

Building the average three-bedroom semi-detached home takes about 9,500 cups of tea.

For a more ambitious project, such as the £800 million restoration of London's St Pancras station, you'll need a whopping six million cups of tea to keep the "brickies" happy.

Building the Scottish Parliament is believed to have required at least four million cups, while putting out an edition of The Scotsman each day involves about 2,500 cups.

The new survey also found that tea plays a vital role, with 80 per cent of people claiming they find out more about what is going on at work over a cup of tea than in any other way.

Examining the stereotype of labourers clasping their steaming mugs of tea, more than 100 building firms were canvassed over their workers' drinking habits.

The results show that a cup of strong tea still plays a healthy role in the daily life of workers.

The survey suggests builders take an average of four tea breaks each day. It is often young apprentices who do the brewing, with the daily ritual said to also encourage bonding between workers.

Builders said the beverage made them more productive, with nearly seven in 10 (68 per cent) insisting tea had relaxing and stress-relieving properties.

Despite the common belief that builders' tea comes with milk and several sugars, more than four in 10 say they don't take any sugar, and fewer than a third like two sugars or more.

The research was commissioned by Make Mine A Builders, a new brand of tea.

Richard Gowar, the firm's managing director, said: "Tea has been the drink of choice for builders in the UK for many years, and as the survey results show it still plays an important role in the daily life of British builders today.

"It is great to know that we are keeping the tradition alive."

Jonathan Brown, editor of e-newsletter Scottish Construction Now!, agreed tea drinking remains a key part of the day. He said: "Many people enjoy a hit of caffeine to sharpen their performance."

But he lamented the end of the "traditional tea break with people playing cards" on sites.

Graham Kelly, the managing director of Thomas Johnson, a shop-fitting firm that has worked on sites including Edinburgh Castle and Gatwick Airport, said fizzy drinks and even "fancy" coffees were now growing in popularity.

He said: "A man might want to have a cup of tea before he starts, then at 10am, then he has one with his lunch, but could he go for a fourth cup of tea? That might be stretching it nowadays. Guys have got far more options then just a cup of tea ... they will buy their cappuccino and latte."

Tea breaks are a tradition that have been with us for 200 years.

Britons drink an average of three cups a day, with the country going through 165 million annually.

The full article contains 556 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 25 November 2007 10:14 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Office and workplace
 
1

Scullion,

Canada 26/11/2007 01:38:33

A corollary study, "How Many Kilos of Cocaine Does It Take to Fund a Leveraged Buyout", is due out any day now.

2

Sylvia in Regina,

Canada 26/11/2007 05:28:14

This is such a silly article!!!
Scullion - I have a sillier question! What the heck has happened to the Haggis Hunt site??? I just loved looking at all the Web Cam sites every day, and for the last few weeks, they have the same darn pictures!!! I emailed, but only got a "we will look into it" and I haven't heard a thing since.

Cheers!! - and our Saskatchewan Roughrider's won the Grey Cup today (just luck, by the way they played) - against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers! I hope you watched it.

3

Boy Wonder,

26/11/2007 07:52:40

It's the psychology of tea at work here. A piping hot cuppa or four on a cold day, especially in our long Autumn or Winter season, is going to feel quite refreshing and revitalising to most people, especially those in the building trades.

It doesn't matter what brand it is, it doesn't even have to be tea ... a hot cuppa in cold weather is exactly what the body requires! And of course, as long as the job gets done ... where's the harm? The workman is content and will quite happily work away at his (or her) job!

4

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 26/11/2007 08:25:59

1001, 1002, 1003,........1004, 1005, .......
How many houses now!...1006, 1007.......1000'????
Dart that's whit's wrong wi me!...its the Caffeine!!

5

Nick_Byrne,

Glasgow 26/11/2007 09:04:45

Speaking of which, I need a brew.

6

Sinnerman,

Another Planet 26/11/2007 09:42:20

#3. The haggis hunting season does not start until St Andrews Day.

There is a fundamental error with this research: builders drink mugs of tea not cups. Since a decent sized mug will hold 2 cups the figures need to be doubled to get the cup value of tea consumed.

I average around 6 mugs per day which would be 12 cups. So who are the 3 non-tea drinkers? Or 9 one-cup per day drinkers?

7

Helen,

26/11/2007 09:52:07

I don't drink tea....never have, it's dreadful stuff. Anyone doing work in my house would be very carefully monitored and wouldn't be getting anything like four tea breaks. If they were lucky they might get two, one in the morning and one in the afternoon provided they've done all the work.
There's no need for idleness among the workforce. I drink my coffee and eat my lunch at my desk so that I can keep working, no need to indulge in lunchbreaks.

8

Antagonist the 3rd,

26/11/2007 09:55:37

I'm more of a Diet Coke man. Tea just reminds me of Eastenders and it tastes so bland.

Never mind, hava cuppa tea. Who wants a cup of tea etc.

9

Boy Wonder,

26/11/2007 10:22:22

I never drink tea, coffee or fizzy drink. Water is the best drink by far ... especially if it's chilled!

10

Charles Linskaill,

Having a cupp'a 26/11/2007 10:32:12

~8. Im nae working for you Helen, you round like the employer from hell!

11

Charles Linskaill,

Having a cupp'a 26/11/2007 10:34:01

~8. Im nae working for you Helen, you sound like the employer from hell!

12

Ellie,

Edinburgh 26/11/2007 11:00:07

Because I don't drink whilst I'm doing something it never occurs to me to offer drinks until I'm ready for one myself, mind you I don't hovver over workmen to make sure they're doing their job properly either. I wonder who seriously thought of this 'study' as useful. Surely results/manpower are more significant.

13

Ellie,

Edinburgh 26/11/2007 11:07:35

Just read it again and realised it's advertising TEA.

WHAT A WASTE OF RESOURCES.

14

,

26/11/2007 11:12:28
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: Scotsman Import, Original comment id: 1174454, Article id was mapped to record!
15

cataibh,

Ach yur seen it 26/11/2007 11:28:52

Tea --oh come on-- Its three bottles of IRN BRU per man per day.

16

Mainspring,

Everyone has to be somewhere!! 26/11/2007 11:30:57

#10.

Boy Wonder, be careful drinking water - have you seen what fish do in it??

17

dimitris,

Athens Greece 26/11/2007 11:36:52

After my rough calculations -I am working at this momoment- the No of cups of tea are given by :
N=T/24[ A + ( F + W +H )/100]+ K
where:
N=No of cups,
T=temperature ,
A=his age ( real in years),
F=fitness(1-10) ,
W=his wife age (false),
H=the amount of help given ,
K=special cotsant for everybody ( -10-+10).
Really this a close calculation to an imaginary condition ,
a cup of tea is refreshing at any time .

18

Pomona man,

26/11/2007 11:44:22

Helen

You got a whip then? Cos if you do, I'll come and work for you and get punished for drinking my tea!!

19

Boy Wonder,

26/11/2007 12:47:36

#21. I know full well what fish do in water. You just don't know what I can do in it!!!! :))

20

Ard Righ,

The Rock of Edinburgh 26/11/2007 13:18:05

"Hugh Falconer a Forres man became Superintendent of Saharanpur Botanic Gardens in India. With the help of three Scotsmen- Robert Fortune, Dr William Jameson and the marketing skill of Thomas Lipton - he successfully transplanting tea from china to India, to become the drink of the British (english) empire.
Until then, China had been the main supplier of tea, but Robert Fortune disguised himself as a Chinese boy and infiltrated China, transporting tens of thousands of plants over the Himalayas into India, where they were grown and improved by Jameson, marketed by Thomas Lipton, and brought to breakfast tables world wide."

From the introduction to the Poem on Hugh Falconer by Pariag MacNeill, Brain Heart 2007

Another of our thousands of inventors influencing life as we know it.

21

SometimeHippy,

26/11/2007 13:40:56

Gawd Chairman Gordon (comment #1), can't you look for the positive in something? Get back to your Daily Mail and stop bothering us!

22

Discretionpvs,

Next to the moose with the Argonaut banner 26/11/2007 15:42:30

Sylvia in Regina---------I agree totally with you about the article. But not the game. On the day, Sask was the better team, taking advantage of Bomber boo-boos, to be polite. As a great fan of Pinball Clemens, I'm sorry the "Agronuts" didn't make it, but Sask is the next best thing. Hope you have a huge party at Taylor Field.

23

Charles Linskaill,

On the mobile 26/11/2007 15:59:46

#29. SometimeHippy, I think you will find this news paper is owned by the Daily Mail group.

24

media4,

Ottawa, Canada 26/11/2007 17:02:36

"Britons drink an average of three cups a day, with the country going through 165 million annually." 165 million what? With about 55 million Britons, it strikes me you'd go thru 165 million cuppas DAILY.

25

Jock Tamson,

Scotland, Caledonia, Alba 26/11/2007 17:06:33

Serious builders work on building sites, not established houses.

They turn up early for a qick read of the tabloid and a caffeinated drink, sometimes with a bite to eat.

Breakfast is the next break. Then lunch. Even working 12 hour shifts rarely produces the third break - the breakfast and lunch breaks tend to be spaced further apart.

My experience is, that when the canteen supplies get towards depletion point, it is the coffee which always disappears from the office supply and not the tea. Indeed, I would say that Scottish builders are coffee, lemonade and soup in a flask people.

There are also a lot of budding chefs in the building trade and the everyday chatter revolves around garlic and chilli a lot. In Scotland at least.

To sum up. The article is English Builderdash

26

ThePeter,

Glasgae 26/11/2007 18:29:50

So does a decent building / house means the builderrs have had decent quality tea?

And can we start paying their wages in cuppas instead?

27

janet from the other planet,

phoenix, az, usa 26/11/2007 18:41:42

# 18 Winni

You should use loose tea and not tea bags!!!

28

Annlass,

Toronto,ON 26/11/2007 20:08:14

I attended the Grey Cup game at Rogers Stadium yesterday and had great seats but I didn't expect to be writing about it in the Scotsman. Too bad that the Blue Bombers had to play a "rookie" quarterback but all in all not a bad game.
#8 ,, Helen, do you keep a chamberpot under your chair?
#17..Wini..I stopped reading your piece on the perfect cup of tea as soon as you wrote TEABAG. How disgusting, don't allow them in my home but then I still prefer to use a teapot and will allow a modem.

29

karin m,

Fri 30 november boycott the scotsman forums 26/11/2007 23:57:56

3 days to boycott the scotsman day.

Fri 30 november boycott the scotsman forums

any poster failing to adhere to the boycott on fri 30th novemeber will themselves be boycotted.

30

Stockbridge,

27/11/2007 00:01:00

When it comes to builders: remember there are two Ts in Scottish, one tea in British, and none in Polish.

Who will build your house fastest?

You need to admire Polish spirit. Although they cannot stand never mind build houses after a few cuppas of that stuff!

31

Stockbridge,

27/11/2007 00:03:54

39. karin m

Gosh, how unilateral of you!

If only the americans posting in the international forum would offer the same threat, it might let any post against their nation stand against deletion.

32

Haggis MacBagpipes,

Central Canada - ex Perth and Glesca' 27/11/2007 02:51:54

#10 - Boy Wonder

Best water to drink is Distilled Water, it is purer than aw the ithers ye kin get.

Ah drink, at least, eight glasses o' distilled water every day.

I also huv a few cups o' tea, but nae sugar, jist a wee dribble o' milk in it.

Ah kin hae coffee if ah want tae...but that, ah drink black, nae sugar or milk.

Buy yersel' some Distilled Water, Boy Wonder, an' ye'll soon notice the difference, it's better for yer system, too.
Cheers...
Haggis MacBagpipes™©

33

MichScot,

USA 27/11/2007 04:35:10

#8

Helen

Are you a Yank? If not, you're in danger of becoming one. I live the life, and it isn't all that great.

34

SometimeHippy,

27/11/2007 09:01:00

#32 - I think you'll find that The Scotsman is owned by Johnston Press plc, and they don't come under the Daily Mail group of companies unless I'm very much mistaken.


 

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