
That cupboard door doesn’t look at home here. Maybe it was meant to one of the ship cabins, which were manufactured here.

The downstairs of the cubile. Looks like some sort of a workshop.

Another door to the dock.

A smashed metallic closet. This actually looks like an archive system.

But most likely it is related to heavy industry, not paper.

Back to the halls, then.

This area had a plastic, not a concrete floor. I believe, that the building has undergone quite many changes in its configuration during its operational years.

The big windows are facing the parking lot. This means, that I have almost done a full circle inside it.

This structure, and probably coloring too, are original.

The phone is inside out.

Another corner in this hall. It looks like those doors lead to the entrance from the parking lot.

A toilet. I believe it looked like this already when the building was new.

And another one. The green boxes seem a bit misplaced.

A break room with a small kitchen.

The break room windows had a steel net in front of them.

More closed space facing the factory front.

A rescue chart of the factory. It was called Paiko – Paimion kojeistoteollisuus.

Another small, dark, office looking room in a funny place.

And a fairly large one, too.

There was a circuit board, which surprisingly is almost intact. Only the fuses have been removed.

A better look at the cupboards seen a few photos back.

Another office room. The entrance seen through the windows is the one, which I displayed in one of the first photos from this location.

The shades are intact. Unbelievable.

A permanent work sheet. It also includes the possibility to list people, who are sick, on holiday or deployed elsewhere, probably the dockyard installing the cabins.

The storage – smashed. Finishing – fucked up. There’s even a failed sticker in the finishing section.

A mess of paper in one corner of the office. I didn’t take my time to go through them. I had already explored this place properly enough.
But there will still be one more post. And then we’re done with these great halls and moving on to the next ones.