The Squash Court project documents the characteristics inherent in the evolution of the squash courts located in the modernist structure of the Bathurst Jewish Centre in suburban Toronto. Minding the technical definition of archaeology as the study of ancient cultures through the examination of their material remains, I posit myself as both archaeologist/demographer, as well as artist/documentary photographer, simultaneously. Each squash court is photographed both front and back in order to mimic traditional photographic notions of objectivity. The inherent architecture of a squash court, with its polished hardwood floors, high ceilings, and moulded out-of-bounds line does not readily lend itself for appropriation as an alternate space, and this palimpsest is evident in the photographs.