🌿 Secure your garden sanctuary with style and sustainability!
The Keter 245957 Darwin Outdoor Garden Shed combines eco-friendly 100% recyclable polypropylene construction with durable 16mm double-wall panels. Featuring a moisture-resistant floor, natural light window, ventilation grille, and padlock-ready door, it offers a secure, fresh, and sturdy storage solution for modern outdoor living.
Product Dimensions | 125.8 x 184.5 x 205.1 cm; 45 kg |
Part number | 245957 |
Item display height | 50 centimetres |
Item display width | 50 centimetres |
Material type | Polypropylene |
Power source type | Battery |
Manufacturer | Keter |
Item model number | 245957 |
ASIN | B07ZL2773J |
F**
Great value.
Great. Easy to put together and sturdy. Doesn’t look cheap like a lot of plastic sheds
M**B
Excellent product
The order arrived 5 days earlier than scheduled which was great. Very easy to assemble (some of the diagrams could have been clearer, but I’ve done a few so knew the ropes). I did this one for a neighbour. I have a larger one myself that I’ve had for 3 years and it’s as strong and sturdy as the day I put it up.
M**M
Shed
The shed came eventually and am happy with it.Dont believe the box 1-2 hours to put together unless your a joiner
T**8
Great Plastic Shed
Great shed. Very sturdy and smarty looking... Think I could have found it cheaper else where but was in stock and needed a shed. Recommend looking at if you would like a nice looking and low maintenance plastic shed.
L**O
Looks good and sturdy but one part doesn’t fit properly
Delivered on time. Looks good apart from the fact the door doesn’t fit properly. Small Gaps at bottom and top. How sturdy it is will be tested by the weather in time.
M**M
Great shed
This was reasonably priced and very easy to put up. We have had the shed for over a year and it has been fantastic
M**1
keter Darwin 6x4 shed
I've had the keter Darwin 6x4 shed up for a couple of weeks now and all I can say is that I'm well pleased with it. I didn't buy mine from Amazon, but its the same product - managed to find one at Argos for £300.Firstly, if you can put fairly complicated flat-pack furniture together, you can put this together. However, make sure that you have a totally flat base ground for it. I laid down some patio slabs. Secondly, if you're having the shed up against a fence on one side or in a corner of the garden, don't bother too much lining the shed base up precisely to start with. You will find that as you go along, you will need to move/slide the part-completed shed to one side at a time, as you need to fix the roof on, put screws through the base into the shed walls on each side, etc... so you will need side access from time to time.The window - Yes... you can have this either left or right side. In fact, there are 6 panel sections that measure 169.5cm wide - this includes one panel pre-cut for the window. So you can actually pick 6 different areas, including rear panel and even the door panel, to include the window section. It just depends on your preference as to how you want to slot them in. I did my shed on my own, but I would suggest 1. Don't do it on a breezy day!! as panels will fall over when you slot them in and 2. Get a step ladder so that it will help you when fixing into place the roof cross member support and the two roof panels.All told, unpacking, sorting through the different sections/parts, a quick read through of instructions etc and then full assembly took about 4 hours. Also, get yourself an electric screwdriver or fairly lightweight drill. There are around 170 screws so make things easy for yourself. The door - yes that can open left to right or right to left and as I said earlier, you can have the option to put the window panel section as the door section.If you need to know (as I needed to find out), the door panel is 66.7". By the time you fit the metal frame around the door panel to support the hinges and then fit that to the door aperture for the shed, you are looking at a door opening to around 67". Also with the door, I'm around 5'10" in trainers, and the door has enough height clearance for me.In my pic, I bought a 6-pack of those foam-type click together tiles from Halfords for £12, just to absorb anything dropped in the shed - otherwise it will be dropping onto the hard shell plastic base that the shed sits on. I just needed one pack of 6 tiles for that job.I'd say - definitely worth the money and hopefully will remain watertight for a long while yet. As a side note, there has been heavy rain since putting the shed up and I've taken a look inside and no roofline leaks or water ingress from the base. Would recommend one of these to anyone.I still have the instruction booklet if anyone needs any more info etc.
M**P
Buy your own screws....
Once up is OK but if Keter can't provide screws suitable for the job (there are parts where you are meant to self-tap them into the door frame and the heads are terrible) then they shouldn't bother. I had to use some I had around else there is no way this would have got built. Design is a good idea but let down by poor manufacturing choices - on youtube comments it seems to be intermittent so could be bad batches or subsequent cost-savings. Looks cheaper than it is once up (but it is plastic so never going to look fancy) and already had some chips come off the trim on day 1 that said it is plastic so assuming no damage should in theory last.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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