At Yestermorrow, we offer our time and skill in building a variety of projects in collaboration with local non-profits, schools, and other community members. Our mission is best met when we can pair our efforts with those who can most benefit from them.
Yestermorrow projects can be found throughout the Mad River Valley and beyond. Aside from the more visible public examples of our work, we regularly create cabinetry, concrete countertops, timber frames, yurts, renovations, tiny houses, garden sheds, earthen ovens, treehouses and other building projects that may not be obvious to the general public.
Many of our hands-on classes require a building project as an integral aspect of the class. If you are interested in one of the projects listed, please contact us by filling out our Client Inquiry Form.
A few example projects in our community include:
Laraway Bridge
A big part of supporting Laraway youth in their personal development is providing them with spaces for exploration and play. A centerpiece of the site development at their new home has been the playground. Laraway staff sought out Yestermorrow as a community partner because of its mission alignment and ability to provide non-traditional hands-on learning experiences. The footbridge built by the Yestermorrow class at Laraway is a gateway into the playground, passing over a small drainage full of wildflowers that separates the main buildings and the playground area. The structure can be used for play in and of itself. It also provides options for youth to navigate their way through the space and offers a bench for rest with expansive views across the property.
Waterbury Dog Park
One such project was the creation of a fenced dog park, a safe location for the community’s canines to freely intermingle and socialize. The centerpiece of the park was to be a shade shelter, where the dog’s owners could congregate out of the sun or rain. Enter Yestermorrow. Working in partnership with the town’s community planner and recreation director, Yestermorrow instructor Josh Jackson designed a tasteful and beautiful post and beam structure, which was hand cut by the school’s May 2015 Timber Framing class, and raised at the site by the students. The park officially opened a few months later, almost four years to the day since the floods of Irene. The response has been dramatic, with many smiling faces and wagging tails. And just beyond the park fence, a literal stone’s throw away, the Winooski River flows calmly by, a constant reminder of both the power of water and the power of community.
Fayston Elementary School
Student Emma Costello said “we created a structure that would ultimately be expanded on. It was a thought-provoking design challenge and very rewarding to see the results of our hard work and set the tone for a larger vision.” The kids love it too!
Shelburne Farms
In 2014, the class designed and built a fine-looking composting toilet that adds to the comfort and enjoyment of visitors, and solved a pressing need to replace a less-then-environmentally-friendly porta-potty. Built out of lumber sustainably harvested and milled in the Shelburne Farms' educational forest, the structure will enhance Shelburne Farms' outdoor education programs that reach tens of thousands every year.
Waitsfield Elementary School
Thea Alvin, who teaches Yestermorrow’s Art of Stone Workshop, also added to the whimsy and vibrancy of the playground when serving as an artist-in-residence, involving school children in constructing a circular, mini piazza.