Industrious
Last week my favorite extant architect and I took a trip to Oakville, CT. The motivation? Well, two years ago he had found a 1900âs chemistâs table that not only âmadeâ (or in his words, âdefinedâ) our design office, but also functions as the catchall for all the stuff you donât want clients to notice â like files, paper supplies and snacks. I was dying to see the shop it came from. Little did I know that this âshopâ called Get Back, was a 40k square-foot warehouse filled to the brim with every industrial item imaginable⦠in spades.
I got a chance to speak to the extremely personable owner of this vast operation that takes worn out and cast off metal and wood industrial objects and gives them new life â¦often with a very new purpose. Tim Byrne left Dublin in 1976 for London where he worked in construction, teaching himself the art of cabinet making. Due to a floundering economy and high unemployment, he decided to come to the US in 1987 where he continued perfecting his craft and where he developed a fascination with all things Industrial in this country. âYou just donât see this kind of stuff in Europe â and if you do, itâs most likely a reproductionâ, he told me. âEverything metal was melted down during the War.â So he started salvaging equipment and fixtures from defunct and abandoned factories. In 1999 he rented three thousand square feet in a wonderful, but essentially empty, warehouse complex in Oakville, CT. Today his carefully sorted-by-type, long brick-walled rooms filled with industrial lights, washing machines, filing cabinets, machine wheels, molds, dollies, scalesâ¦. supply the stuff restaurants, hotels, and retail stores worldwide are searching for.
In the same repurposed factory buildings we also visited an artist who is putting her hand to pretty much everything decorative, but most notably wall coverings; and three metal worker guys who were making an interior stair railing for (of all places) an upper East Side, New York City apartment.
Birdâs-eye view of the factory complex taken through an old glass window
Bad photo of the showroom at Get Back
Detail of items in the Get Back showroom
Fantastic weighted red metal door
Hugely long fixture of old wood drawers â want this.. would worry though that youâd never know what drawer you put something in
Now for the fun, quirky stuff that resides outside the showroom
Tins from a bakery
I climbed a ladder for this shot â wanted you to have a better sense of the scale of these rooms
Love these chairs⦠they just have so much personality
Need a stool?
How cool is this chair!
Porcelain glove molds
And metal hat molds
Once Tim Byrne puts his spit and polish on these dolly carts they get snapped up as coffee tables
Hair dryer for Marge Simpson
Get Backâs reconditioning crew
One floor below Get Back we discovered the studio and showroom of PettaThompson. We met both Rita Petta and her partner Rebecca Thompson who were in the midst of overseeing the application of silver leaf on to sheets of pressed bark to be used as wall coverings.
Workers applying silver leaf on to pressed fruit tree bark for wall coverings
Samples of all the PettaThompson wall coverings ready to be made into swatch books
Close up of the pressed bark paper that comes from a rural town an hour outside Mexico City
The bark laid out for inspection
Bark used as window treatment
Thompsonâs studio⦠note those brushes
Sampling of her painting
PettaThompson recommended a metal worker for a light fixture Michael is working on. So we ventured over to their âstudioâ and bravely ventured in despite the name on the door.
Dragonâs Breath Forge
Stepping into the forge
After this we were hungry enough to eat Oakville, but settled for a panini that covered a dinner plate at Matteoâs.