As part of our work each year, Vanaajamaja organizes a community project during which a team of international volunteers builds or restores an old building that has some significance for the local community. Aside from the obvious goal of accomplishing this necessary building work, the projects are also about sharing the experiences, the sheer joy of working together and enjoying the process of giving and learning.
Miikse Orthodox Church reconstruction Workshop
Another tiny wooden church is under reconstruction in Setomaa for the summer of 2024.
Abruka Chapel Building Workshop
For the summer of 2023 we are invited by local community to build a new small log chapel on the island Abruka.
Vilsandi windmills restoration
In the spring of 2022 three post windmills were restored by OÜ Lükkepakk on the windy island of West Estonia. We involved some great carpenters from our network to take part of the restaration work to share the joy of woodwork.
Restoration of the roof of Orthodox Church of St. Nikolay in Lalsi
In 2017 NGO Vanaajamaja in cooperation with Orthodox Church of Estonia and local community initiated a restoration project of Orthodox Church of St. Nikolay in Lalsi. The project continued until 2021 and we accommodated restoraion workshops ofr 5 summers.
Conservation works of Puutli church
Vanaajamaja in cooperation with the Estonian Heriatage Board initiated conservation works of tiny wooden orthodox church in South-East Estonia, in Puutli village. In the fall of 2015 the log walls were reinforced. In the spring of 2016 a crew of international volunteers helped to restore the tower and change the roof cover to wooden shingle roof.
Building a shelter for Maarja Village
In cooperation with Estonian woodhouse Association there was a traditional timber-framing course tutored by Will Wallace-Gusakov in April 2014. The result of the course – a grill-house – was made (with the help of many generous sponsors) as a gift for Maarja Village – a home for young adults with learning disabilities.
Building Järuska covered wooden bridge
Estonian enterprise Hobbiton and NGO Vanaajamaja carried through an international community-service building project of covered wooden bridge in North-Eastern Estonia in August 2012. The bridge was built as replacement for former bridge flown away by spring floods. Over the course of four weeks, an international crew of volunteers from Estonia, USA, France and UK constructed and erected the Estonian first covered bridge.
German Journeymen/Zimmermann
In 2010 we accommodated three German journeymen – Stefan, Arne and Simon – carpenters who, according to medieval traditions, were journeying three years around Europe before they could open up their own worskshops. In Estonia they spent a couple of weeks helping us to build a timber frame construction in Võrumaa.
Visits beyond the horizon:
Chateau d’Harcourt, Normandy, France
Lead by the Charpentiers sans Frontières the reconstruction of the entrance bridge to the Chateau of Harcourt, one of the medieval jewels of central Normandy, was organized in September 2018 and participated by 60 carpenters among which Andres Uus was presented.
Kesurokai 2018, Lüneburg, Germany
In the summer of 2018, the international Kesurokai meeting took place in cooperation with the Hanseatic city of Lüneburg. A covered wooden bridge was built with the 60 craftsmen involved from 8 countries. See the process in short.
Rendez-vous workshop at the great tithe barn of Aclou, Normandy
In Sept 2016 Andres was working on the restoration of the 15th century barn together with Belgian, French, German and many other colleagues on the workshop organized by the Charpentiers sans Frontières. They repared the damaged sections of the gable with oak using the same hand tool methods used in the original construction. See the clip in local news: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1T7xBH7ZEN4&feature=youtu.be
Synagogue roof reconstruction workshop, Sanok, Poland
In 2011 Andres was participating in an international building project in Sanok, Poland. Under the leadership of the Timber Framers Guild a group of volunteering carpenters from all over the world were reconstructing a historic roof for the Museum of Polish Jews in Warsaw.
2nd European Kesurokai
In 2007 Andres participated in the second European Kesurokai, in Mützingen, Germany where a traditional Japanese gate torii was built. The Kesurokai is a meeting place for European and Japanese carpenters and an opportunity to learn from each others skills, crafts and carpentry culture.
EU Funded Cooperation Projects:
REDIAPRO – Revival of Disappearing Architectural Professions
Vanaajamaja participates in an international cooperation project in order to promote disappearing traditional building skills all over the Europe. In the REDIAPRO project a group of architects, vocational educators, built heritage protection organisations and training centres like us are networking in order to learn each others best practices and bring traditional building skills and crafts into the spotlight once again. Project is financed by Erasmus+ Programme.
This E-learning Platform of Traditional Craftsmanship’ is a transnational project answering the great need for innovative approaches in the education of the craftsmanship related to traditional building methods. E-learning Platform provides 12 online courses on traditional architetural skills. Project is financed by Erasmus+ Programme.