Yorkshire Post

WEAVING A FUTURE AT MILL

Paul Kempe is one of the founders behind Tileyard London, a thriving creative hub, and is now planning a northern extension at Rutland Mills in Wakefield. Laura Reid reports.

- ■ Email: laura.reid@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @YP_LauraR

My vision is that people will be coming to Wakefield to experience what will be an incredibly vibrant community – to meet, to eat, to stay in the hotel. We are super excited.

PAUL KEMPE is quite honest that not so long ago, he didn’t really know where Wakefield was. It was with an invite to see The Hepworth from its former deputy director that he made the journey to the city from his base in London around five years ago.

The gallery and its exhibition­s left him “completely blown away”, but it is the collection of derelict mill buildings next door that have preoccupie­d him in the years that have followed since. “I asked what on earth was happening with those mill buildings,” he says. “They are potentiall­y phenomenal but essentiall­y dilapidate­d.”

The complex he is referring to is known as Rutland Mills. Dating from 1872, the site was once a hub for worsted spinning, but the mills have not been used since 1999. Still, their state of disrepair did not deter property developer Kempe. His firm had already transforme­d an empty and unloved estate in London’s Kings Cross into what is said to be Europe’s largest community of independen­t artists and businesses, with music at its heart, and he saw the potential in Wakefield for a creative hub of similar calibre. And so he was introduced to then-Wakefield Council leader Peter Box.

“He said he’d like to come down to Tileyard London and have a look. That was the beginning of things. He came down, loved our community, brought the councillor­s and regenerati­on team down and they loved it. And that’s when the conversati­on started about creating Tileyard North at Rutland.”

Work is now getting under way on the flagship scheme, described by current Wakefield Council leader Denise Jeffery as a “gamechange­r” for the city that marks the final stage of a regenerati­on ‘masterplan’ for its waterfront. Kempe’s vision for Rutland is “a vibrant destinatio­n for creative and collaborat­ive partnershi­ps in music, film, TV, design, new media and indeed all facets of the commercial creative sector”. There are plans for workshops and studios, bars, restaurant­s and cafes, conference and education spaces and a new hotel. “If we get it right, Tileyard at Rutland Mills will become a destinatio­n – a magnet for people not just in Wakefield but further afield,” Kempe says. “My vision is that people will be coming to Wakefield to experience what will be an incredibly vibrant community – to meet, to eat, to stay in the hotel.

“We are very inclusive and open and want people to experience and enjoy the facilities that we will have. They will be there for the public as well, not just the people based and working at Tileyard North. We’re super excited by the prospect. We are committing a huge amount of energy and resources to it and will continue to do so. It will be a success.”

It’s a bold statement to make – though his credential­s stand Kempe in good stead for success. He trained as a solicitor initially – “I gave that up immediatel­y on the day I qualified because I just could never see myself working as a lawyer” – before establishi­ng City and Provincial Properties (CPP) in 1984. One of the firm’s most notable achievemen­ts to date is the developmen­t of Tileyard London, with Kempe one of the threeman team behind its creation.

“We acquired the buildings there just before the financial crisis, so not the best timing,” he says. “There was a series of buildings, about 105,000 square feet, mostly empty. There was about 75 or 80 per cent vacant, no creatives whatsoever and it was a very unloved, uninvested estate.”

Kempe had recently invested in a music production company called Goldust and two of its creators, Michael Harwood and Nick Keynes, were to become part of the team at the helm of Tileyard’s developmen­t.

“It was pure interest – never a financial investment to make money,” Kempe says. “But what an incredible happy accident it turned out to be. Without doing that, Tileyard would never have existed and we would never have hatched this plan to turn it into what it is today.”

Harwood and Keynes had been in a band called Ultra and, after getting dropped by their label, ended up creating Goldust, writing and producing for a host of pop artists in the early 2000s including Kylie, Liberty X and Natasha Bedingfiel­d. In 2011, they moved into Kempe’s light industrial estate and the trio began to shape the future of the complex. Tileyard was born. “We spent six months trying to contact everyone in the music industry to get them to commit to us building them a studio,” Kempe explains. A handful of companies said they would sign up and so work began to turn the first of the buildings into ten studios.

The site grew, expanding to include music businesses as well as writers, composers, mixers and producers over the next two years. Suddenly, it had a beating heart and for the first time, people began approachin­g Kempe and the team about getting on board. “Fastforwar­d seven years from there, we have an amazing vibrant community which has been totally curated,” Kempe says.

Tileyard is now approachin­g its tenth anniversar­y. There’s 1,500 ‘creatives’ based on site, 250 companies and just over 100 studios, all centred around meeting places and amenities including a cafe, wellness centre and brewery. As well as those who work within the music industry, there’s a modelling agency, film and TV production firms, a live gaming organisati­on and technology firms. And that’s all alongside in-house management, publishing, and record company Tileyard Music and Tileyard Education, which provides MA courses in a range of music-related areas.

“Virtually every major artist has been up to Tileyard, either to work or meet people that they’re working with,” Kempe says. It’s a base for artists including The Prodigy, Tinchy Stryder, Sigala, Chase & Status and Mark Ronson, who produced big chart hit Uptown Funk on site.

Kempe had little idea how successful the developmen­t would be. But the trio had a firm vision – and they stuck to it, despite the challenges. “What we did from day one, even though we had huge amounts of empty space and were paying all sorts of charges on it, was agree that we would never let any space to a non-creative company,” Kempe explains. “That was a tough call. In the first couple of years, we were turning people away who would pay good rent but weren’t right for Tileyard. I’m very pleased that we stuck to our guns on that despite the financial pain. Every time I go to Tileyard, I get a real buzz.”

Kempe and his team now refer to Rutland Mills as Tileyard North. “We are wanting this to be a northern powerhouse extension of Tileyard London, servicing not just Wakefield and the wider region but the whole north of England. Apart from jobs, which are super important, this will create a place for people to come to a curated, creative community, which is going to be hugely positive in terms of empowering people in the north. And I think if Tileyard London is anything to go by, any person who joins our community is on a real growth path.”

 ??  ?? Paul Kempe, property developer behind Rutland Mills scheme in Wakefield.
Paul Kempe, property developer behind Rutland Mills scheme in Wakefield.
 ?? PICTURE: SCOTT MERRYLEES ?? CREATIVE FUTURE: Rutland Mills is due to be transforme­d by developer Paul Kempe, pictured with former Wakefield Council leader Peter Box.
PICTURE: SCOTT MERRYLEES CREATIVE FUTURE: Rutland Mills is due to be transforme­d by developer Paul Kempe, pictured with former Wakefield Council leader Peter Box.
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