Community workshop evolving

Looking at progress on the site of the new community workshop are (from left) Hampden Community...
Looking at progress on the site of the new community workshop are (from left) Hampden Community Energy Society member Stuart Barnes, Hampden School principal Matt Hannagan and society chairman Dugald MacTavish. PHOTO: WYATT RYDER
A small Waitaki district town will soon have a dedicated workshop open to anybody, with the aim of sharing dying skills, giving confidence to school children and allowing people to "follow their dreams".

For about six years the Hampden Community Energy Society has been raising funds and planning for its community workshop project, for which construction has recently begun.

Just across the road from Hampden School, the space will act as an open facility for anybody in the community to use specialist equipment and create whatever they wish.

Society chairman Dugald MacTavish said the inspiration for the project went back about 30 years to East Otago High School worker Murray Askin, who would open his double-door garage full of tools up to anybody who was interested.

The space became popular among women and children, who often did not have the space or equipment to try out crafts and create what they wanted.

"You would have an 80-year-old working alongside an 8-year-old."

Mr Askin later moved away from the area, but "the seed had always been planted", Mr MacTavish said.

Mr Askin died last month.

Now a similar space was finally coming together, which Mr MacTavish hoped would facilitate all kinds of crafts, including leather-working, electronics, stonework, woodwork, welding and sewing.

"What we need is a creativity space where people can follow their dreams."

An orchard had already been planted and there were also plans for a garden.

He believed the workshop would be "ground-breaking".

Sharing knowledge was a big driving motivator for the project, as Hampden people had a hugely diverse set of skills, he said.

Many of those belonged to its large retiree population and were at risk of being lost.

"Those skills are going to go down in to the ground if we don’t capture them."

The society also ran the local recycling centre and it was "rather disturbing" to see the huge amount of usable materials and fixable goods which were being put to waste.

Much of it could be put to use, but "to upcycle, you need a place to do it".

He envisions it a bit like the facility used in the television show The Repair Shop, where skilled craftsman work together to restore dilapidated objects, most commonly beloved heirlooms.

Society member Stuart Barnes said the town had a lot of small groups dedicated to crafts, but it was rare for them to branch out and share their skills.

The workshop would not only give the town a space to share those skills with each other, but also to the younger generation across the road.

Hampden School has been deeply involved with the project and would use the space regularly.

Young people seemed more anxious than ever and having a controlled space to work alongside others and create something they could be proud of would help boost their confidence, he said.

Hampden had a pub, a hall and some churches, but those were all spaces where the community would get together for a specific reason.

The town had no space where older people could casually socialise with the young and relationships could be built among anyone who liked to create.

Hampden School principal Matt Hannagan said the space would be invaluable for pupils.

The facility aligned well with the school’s goal to strengthen its relationship with the wider Hampden community, as well as the national curriculum, which detailed the need for pupils to be confident, actively involved and lifelong learners.

With the workshop across the road the school would not have to pay for buses to access an alternative and inclusive learning environment, which was an exciting prospect, he said.

The project was estimated to cost about $350,000, most of which had been granted by funders, Mr MacTavish said.

The foundations of the workshop had been laid and the rafters and concrete were scheduled to go in soon.

The rest of the build, including the roof and walls, would be up to the community, Mr MacTavish said.

"We’re confident it will come together."

The group was still looking for donations to equip the workshop and volunteers to help build it.

The council has leased the land to the society for 35 years.

The land was originally dedicated for community activities, but was previously leased for grazing.