The site

Located within a spectacular setting of pristine natural beauty, Kenozero National Park has been recognised as a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve since 2004 due to the unique relationship between its exceptional natural values and its relevance as a cultural area.  

Kenozero National Park is wealthy in historical remains scattered throughout this cultural landscape, with distinctive monuments of wooden architecture which attest to the passage of time in this rural region of northern Russia. Kenozero National Park is the only Protected Area of Russia which owns architectural monuments; these masterpieces of wooden architecture of the 17th and 18th centuries include ten churches and a bell tower, thirty-three wooden chapels and two water mills. Traditional cultural landscapes such as this one has preserved the features of rural land management and planning of that era which have been lost in other industrialised areas of Russia.

Kenozero National Park is known throughout Russia for its well preserved painted “heavens” in churches and chapels. Known as “the seventeen heavens”, these are unique patterns of decorative religious art which do not have any equivalent in the world.

For this reason, the National Park’s mission consists in the preservation, exploration and promotion of the tangible and intangible natural and cultural heritage of the Russian North. When Kenozero National Park was established most of monuments were in a poor condition. It required several years of hard work to remedy their state. However, there is still much to be done.

Kenozero National Park has a long tradition in working with volunteers. Since 2012, volunteers were supporting the conservation and restoration of the heritage sites as well as the maintenance of chapels and churches located in Kenozero National Park. 

The project 2021 focused on conservation and restoration interventions at the chapel of St. Nicholas the Wonder-Maker, a small yet an archetypal monument of Northern Russian wooden architecture from the early 19th century.

 

The project

The chapel of St. Nicholas the Wonder-Maker was deteriorated and required a thorough intervention.

The first and most laborious task required the participants to level the log house, lifting it back to the position that it was in when it was originally erected. Once this was accomplished, other interventions, mainly at the roof, were carried out. These consisted in replacing beams and upper logs, replacing roofing material, fabricating and installing a ridge for the roof, constructing a ladder out of logs as well as manufacturing an information sign which was installed on the pathway leading to the renovated chapel.

The works were conducted under the guidance of the Head of the Repair and Construction Sector of the Kenozero National Park and accompanied by the guidance and supervision of the main architect of the National Park, who has ample experience in the field of conservation of historical wooden monuments.

Within the framework of this European Heritage Volunteers Project the participants had a unique opportunity to obtain direct knowledge and practical experience in working with traditional carpentry tools as well as getting an insight in wood processing technologies traditionally applied in this region.

The projects’ educational programme was completed by excursions and guided tours exploring the magnificent surrounding cultural landscape of Kenozero National Park.

 

The project was organised by Kenozero National Park, in cooperation with European Heritage Volunteers.

European Heritage Volunteers