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The Plimsoll Building

Client:

Argent

Location:

London

Services:

Internal Signage and Wayfinding, External Architectural Signage

This 13-storey building in London’s King’s Cross honours Victorian politician and social reformer Samuel Plimsoll, who gave his name to the Plimsoll Line, the safe limit to which a ship may be loaded. This concept of seafaring safety inspired the wayfinding design from Holmes Wood which expressed the idea of a loading line above and below water.

Plimsoll Building wayfinding signage in wood
Wooden wayfinding signage
Bike storage wooden signage

The building comprises a mix of luxury and affordable flats above two primary schools, the smaller of which is a Special Educational Needs (SEN) one for deaf children. We crafted signs and graphics to convey wayfinding information to these different user groups, using birch ply for the interior of the schools and mahogany and black-painted surfaces for the residential element. Onto both these designs white lettering and iconography was exquisitely screen-printed.


Cobal craft sponge painting
Cobal craft painting
Cobal craft wood painting

We also provided three-dimensional external lettering, wall graphics for the car park and painted numbers on the stairwells and lift lobbies.


Three dimensional wooden lettering in stairwell

Photography Credit: Luke Hayes

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