Pop-Up Workshop: Experience A Low-Tech Lunch

August 30, 2019

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News & Press, Boston
The Pop Up space on School Street.

North Bennet Street School (³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ) recently took on a vacant retail space in Boston’s Downtown Crossing for a temporary showcase of traditional trades. Offered to ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ by Historic Boston Inc. (HBI)—which owns the Freedom Trail-adjacent site—the small storefront space features demonstrations in bookbinding and woodworking, and will be open through November 8, 2019.

A Bookbinding grad marbling paper
A Bookbinding grad marbling paper

Located at 11 School Street and operating weekdays from 11am-2pm, the ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ pop-up workshop has attracted dozens of downtown workers on lunch breaks, and more than a handful of curious tourists. They marvel at live demos of wood marquetry, paper marbling, bowl turning, and other such activities performed by ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ artisans. The storefront space was designed as a respite from the buzz of the office, and many guests have enjoyed what they view as the “low-tech lunch” experience.

“When you walk into the pop-up workshop there’s this feeling of an immediate slow down. When you’re able to be quiet and to focus, time just moves differently,” according to Kristen Odle, ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ Retail & Exhibit Manager. “One person shared how grateful he was just to ‘look at something other than a spreadsheet’ during his lunch break, and how refreshed he felt upon leaving.”

This isn’t the first time HBI has generously offered temporary retail space to ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ. In 2013, the School exhibited handmade furniture, books, jewelry, and even a grand piano in as part of their Annual Celebration of Craft. The current pop-up space is actually part of that same historic structure, which holds the title of Boston’s oldest commercial building. Built in 1718 as a doctor’s apothecary shop, The Old Corner Bookstore later housed Ticknor and Fields, publishers of many well-known American titles, and the origin of its current moniker.

Artisans at work doing inlay and paper marbling
Artisans at work doing inlay and paper marbling

When the building was threatened by demolition for a parking garage in the 1960’s, a group of Bostonians formed . The organization rescued and revitalized the property, and today the building remains an indelible feature of the Downtown Crossing neighborhood. HBI has flourished in the intervening years too, their success exemplified by over two dozen projects that preserve Boston historic architecture and heritage.

³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ has partnered with HBI on multiple projects over the years, including the in Dorchester, in Roxbury, and most recently, the acclaimed in Mattapan. In each of these projects, ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ faculty and students applied their expertise to the historic sites—whether by researching building plans or other archival documents, analyzing the time-honored methods of construction, recreating architectural features, or restoring significant portions of the building components. These projects greatly add to the student experience, and help to preserve and enhance our communities as well.

The ³Ô¹ÏÍ·Ìõ Pop-Up Workshop is located at 11 School Street in Boston, and open weekdays from 11am to 2pm through Friday, November 8, 2019. Guests can stop by to view demonstrations in woodworking and bookbinding, learn more about the School’s programs and classes, or simply enjoy their lunch break free from the buzz of the outside world.

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