Coyne's blackened roses rise from
the converted factory floor by Maya Lin.
Not exact matches
This was held at Wimbourne House — a magnificent
converted hat making
factory from the 1890s, now
converted into a photography studio, painted in spotless white with a beautiful original
floor to ceiling arched windows as the standout feature in the space.
The former furniture
factory was
converted into a three
floor gallery with 10,000 square feet of exhibition space, a high - ceilinged main gallery, and a glass wall facing the Hudson River.
In November 2000, the gallery moved to its present location in 16 Wharf Road, Islington, adjacent to the cutting - edge art area of Hoxton, [1] where it is housed in a two
floor, 10,000 - square - foot (930 m2),
converted Victorian furniture
factory, ten times the size of the Cork Street gallery.
The home office is situated at the front of the
converted factory and shares the same brickwork and concrete
floor as the main part of the house.
A
converted ground -
floor factory workshop in north London with an open - plan living, dining and kitchen area, a main bedroom with en suite, a dressing room / bedroom, a further bedroom, bathroom, WC and inner courtyard.