Picnic table, garden bench or gazebo guitar – if you’ve thought about building it, University of Virginia Sawmilling not only wants to hear about it, but they will also help you make it. And they’ve got plenty of wood to turn your idea into reality.
“We’ve been around about three years and we’ve reached a point where we want to engage people on another level,” said Tim Victorio, who holds a master’s degree in architecture from UVA and is cofounder of UVA Sawmilling. He is a lecturer in the UVA School of Architecture where he teaches introductory architecture courses.
If you have a big idea, but little experience with tools and techniques, Victorio said the sawmillers have your back.
“If you know you want to build something, but don’t know how to build it, we want to make that a possibility,” he said. “We’ll put you in touch with the people who do know how to build it and can help you figure it out and maybe put some tools in your hands so you can learn how to do it yourself.”
Victorio said the sawmillers hope to encourage others in the University community to experience designing and building a project. That’s why they are hosting Mill to Build, their first competition. The idea is that the friendly contest will capture the interest of students, faculty and staff across the University who have a dream of making something.
The organization has the wood readily available. Officially founded in 2020 by Victorio and alumnus Andrew Spears, its original goal was to give trees taken down on UVA property a chance to live on as milled lumber offered to the University community and community at large.
The University owns a lot of properties and there’s a lot of building going on, which means trees are coming down. Rather than chip the trees into small pieces, UVA Sawmilling mills the trees into usable lumber for potential material research, student projects, furnishings or elements for campus buildings and outdoor spaces on Grounds.
So far, the program’s wood has been used for projects like tables for the School of Architecture and raised-bed gardens and garden roof structures at Morven Farms. Still, there is a surfeit of lumber.
“We’re getting more [wood] than we can use now. That log pile is growing weekly,” said Allyson Gibson, program assistant for UVA Sawmilling and a master’s degree candidate in landscape architecture. “We used to mill about twice a year.”