Tim Vincent-Smith aims to refurbish as many pianos as possible before putting them up for "adoption". Those beyond repair are turned into art or furniture
In a deserted former department store near the port of Leith in Edinburgh, Tim Vincent-Smith reaches inside a grand piano's open top, his fingertips lightly plucking at the taut strings.
The piano is one of hundreds rescued by the musician and his team of volunteers, as homes around Britain discard the instruments in favour of more space.
Vincent-Smith's aim is to refurbish as many pianos as possible before putting them up for "adoption". Those beyond repair are turned into art or furniture.
"I discovered that there were loads of pianos going to the dump and so I started making furniture—a window seat and a kind of high bed with a staircase—and then the pianos just kept on coming," he told AFP.
As the instruments flooded in, Vincent-Smith realised that many were still "pretty good", and so he and his bandmate Matthew Wright decided to found Pianodrome, to rescue as many as possible.