Any endeavour in heritage conservation can be judged mainly by the resistance to the temptation of overlaying the original work with one’s own creative ideas or sense of style, and the applied adherence to authenticity of detail, craftsmanship, materials and finishes – all difficult to source by virtue of being consigned to the redundancy of a different era. The Kasturbhai Lalbhai Museum project passes this very fundamental test with flying colours, as is evident in the faithful restoration of each detail. The numerous rooms dispensed on two main levels around a central courtyard are finished with different types of flooring like Kotah stone, sandstone, ceramic tiles, different coloured mosaics and different inlay patterns. The perforated jaali insets and wooden louvres that the doors and windows are adorned with have been brought back to life. Every detail of the polished wood staircase as well as the cast iron spiral one are in their original form. Even the exteriors are neatly salvaged with the typical moulded cement balustrades around balconies painted in impeccable white shades and topped with sloping roofs covered with slate tiles.