Fastest Shed


Fastest Shed is a motorised shed designed and built by Kevin Nicks of Great Rollright, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. The vehicle has been used to break the world land speed record for sheds three times since it was built in 2015. The most recent record was a speed of set on 23 September 2018 at Pendine Sands in Wales.

Design and manufacture

Kevin Nicks, a mechanic and gardener from Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire, United Kingdom came up with the idea of building the unusual vehicle in 2015, as a way of making use of a broken-down Volkswagen Passat he had in his garden. His original focus was to use the Shed for advertising - believing that major organisations would be interested in using a car covered in wood as a replacement for an online marketing strategy. Nicks took twelve months to build the steel frame and wooden shiplap bodywork, install the engine and to make the vehicle roadworthy. The total expenditure for the vehicle was about £50,000. After damaging the engine whilst running Fastest Shed at various speed trials, during which time he set the shed world speed record at, Nicks spent another two years and £80,000 fitting Fastest Shed with a new suspension system and a more powerful Audi RS4 engine. In May 2018, Nicks broke his own record, achieving a speed of.

Trials and events

In mid 2017, Nicks drove Fastest Shed from Land's End to John O'Groats to raise funds for a hospice charity. Nicks broke this trip at Elvington airfield to attempt a run, but the vehicle only achieved a maximum of on this occasion. A few days after arriving in John O'Groats, Nicks embarked on the North Coast 500 route around the coast of Scotland, which he completed in 12 hours.

World records

On 16 September 2017, Nicks set his first shed world speed record. He broke the previous record of held by Edd China, by achieving a speed of at Elvington airfield, Yorkshire.
On 12 May 2018, Fastest Shed broke its first record on Pendine Sands, Carmarthenshire, Wales, with a recorded speed of.
Fastest Shed broke the record for the third time, surpassing its previous record by a narrow margin, recording a speed of, again on Pendine Sands, at the Straightliners "Top Speed" event on 23 September 2018.

Technical details

Fastest Shed's original build was based on a Volkswagen Passat 4Motion, including its engine. Later, the engine power was increased to by fitting it with a nitrous oxide injection kit.
For the September 2018 record attempt, the vehicle was fitted with a Audi RS4 engine. In an interview with Car Throttle, which aired on YouTube, Nicks has confirmed he changed the engine, replacing the existing B5 generation engine with an engine used in the B7 generation RS4, producing. It is also fitted with hydraulic suspension.

World's Fastest Shed

While known as the Fastest Shed, the actual fastest shed belongs to Brian Cade, who built and owns 'Ed the Shed', a Guinness World Record-holding shed that reached a speed of 123 mph at Elvington Airfield in Yorkshire on Sunday 12th October 2025.