In this year’s season of “It sits in the walls”, viewers will be able to accompany home to a number of well -known faces’ homes and accommodation. Once there, it will be a “regular” section with building maintenance, folk education and history, the program’s producer Ulrika Jonsson tells SVT Gävleborg.
– We look forward to a wonderful season, she says.
Farm in Hälsingland
The first episode is being recorded right now, at Malin Berghagen outside Järvsö.
– Since no one knew about this change in advance, none of the participants themselves have applied for themselves, but we have been told and look for the six accommodation, says producer Ulrika Jonsson.
She says that the change is coming on the initiative of SVT, and how it will be next year no one knows. Not Ulrika Jonsson either.
– We always only get order for one season at a time. So we don’t know if there will be anything next year, and how the arrangement would be then, in that case. But we hope for another season, of course, says Ulrika Jonsson.
“I’m a genealogy nerd”
Malin Berghagen is usually restrictive in inviting the public into his home.
– I would never invite a gossip magazine or an interior design magazine, but it is different with things I really care about, such as building maintenance and history. I am a real genealogy nerd, says Malin Berghagen.
In the newly renovated kitchen there is a small peephole left where you see the old pearl point. In the bathroom stands a frame with an old wallpaper from the house.
– I love the history of the houses and would never buy a house without a kitchen stove.
Dream of self -sufficiency
The old houses are best equipped for the future, she says.
– I want there to be heat, own water and cellar. An opportunity to grow. Our goal is to be able to live on what we grow ourselves, six months a year. It would be cool, says Malin Berghagen.
Although she invited a TV team that records with her for eight days, she does not let in SVT Gävleborg anyway. We can follow the kitchen – but no longer.
– You have to wait and see the program, she says.