Refurbishment and Restore Issue 21 2020 | Page 49

of the surrounding site and becomes one of a series of public spaces creating pedestrian routes from the canal to Dundee Street. the basement were re-used to make the servery counter.  Large timber doors were re-imagined as tables in the café.  Bespoke shop fittings were crafted using plywood, steel and rubber in a nod to the industrial heritage The print studio sits at first floor level in the expansive triple height former joinery workshop. Fabric repair works were carried out as necessary, but the patina of one hundred and fifty years of occupation was maintained. Historic joist pockets within the raw brick walls are retained, the original muscular cast iron structure and timber trusses are left exposed, and marks of previous interior paint colours are left untouched. Our approach was not to white wash away the many stories of this space, but instead allow a new layer of occupation to add to the ongoing narrative of this place. In collaboration with visual artist Calum Colvin, Page \ Park designed one of the permanent artwork commissions in the building.  The EPscope is a fantastic synthesis of periscope and kaleidoscope providing a view from the public café into the print studio above overlaid with images of products made by the rubber company.  These objects refract and collide to create an infinity of patterns that are at once obtuse and accurate, like a memory. Where original fabric was no longer required it was repurposed.  Old glazed bricks found behind layers of plaster in www.pagepark.co.uk/ www.refurbandrestore.co.uk - 49