Engine Shed, Historic Environment Scotland’s building conservation centre in Stirling, needed a retail area that respected the character of the restored railway building while introducing a contemporary industrial feel. RED was asked to design and install the space, with design expertise from Ripple Group, and delivered the project in 2019 as part of the wider refurbishment and extension works.
The brief
The brief was shaped by the building itself. Engine Shed is a restored former MOD railway building, refurbished in 2019 with two new wings added. The retail area needed to complement that conservation setting rather than compete with it.
The required look was contemporary, but still grounded in the site’s industrial history. That meant careful material choices and a strong focus on how the approved concepts would translate into practical, manufacturable components.
Our approach
A large part of the work sat in technical design. RED’s technical design team took the approved concepts from the architects and agencies involved and resolved them for manufacture before production began.
Cold Rolled Blackened Steel, listed on the page as CR4 with a lacquered finish, was developed into the scheme to achieve the required industrial look and feel. Once the designs were finalised, they moved into RED’s in-house manufacturing facility, with the design team staying involved through detailed production and on-site installation.
Materials and build details
The strongest material detail on the page is the use of Cold Rolled Blackened Steel with a lacquered finish. This gave the retail area a harder industrial character suited to the setting, while still supporting the practical needs of a manufactured interior.
The page also makes clear that the design work focused heavily on manufacture. This was not treated as a simple fit-out package. The approved concepts were worked through in detail so the finished elements could be produced accurately and installed properly on site.
Installation and logistics
RED handled both manufacture and installation for the retail area. The live page does not currently give programme dates beyond 2019, nor does it state phasing, RAMS timing, access constraints or delivery sequencing. Those details should be added if available, especially if this page is going to match the stronger project-case-study format used elsewhere.
Results and lifecycle value
The completed retail area gives Engine Shed a space that reflects the building’s industrial history while sitting comfortably within a conservation-led environment. It also shows RED’s ability to take architect and agency concepts through technical design, manufacture and installation under one roof.
The clearest project outcome on the page is the balance between heritage context and practical manufacture. The result is a retail interior developed specifically for the building rather than applied as a generic display solution. That second point is an inference from the page’s emphasis on technical design for manufacture and on complementing the restored building.
Planning a heritage, retail or visitor-centre interior? Speak to the team about manufacture for your next project.


