Over the weekend a crew raised the new roof for our historical blockhouse, originally built on the banks of the Kuskokwim River in 1841.
From University of Alaska Museum of the North (Showing 23 of 802 items)
- In 1841 the Russian-American Company built the Kolmakovsky Redoubt (fort) on the midd…
- The restored 1841 Kolmakovsky Blockhouse sits in the background, waiting for the new …
- The Blockhouse and the Roof
- Roof in Field of Flowers
- Builder Sandy Jamieson attaches the straps that will be used to raise the roof of the…
- Sandy and his crew get ready for the arrival of the crane.
- Some of the wooden pegs Sandy used to affix the tamarack logs to the roof.
- Layers of insulation material, moss and tamarack logs make up the roof.
- Ethnology collection manager Angela Linn talks to builder Sandy Jamieson about the pr…
- Some of the moss Sandy collected to use as insulation on the roof.
- The Crane Arrives
- Walking the path the crane must take.
- Sandy adjusts the crane so it can snare a roof.
- Climbing the Roof
- Putting the Straps in Place
- They’ll Need a Crane
- Directing Traffic
- This Way
- Using ropes and hand signals, the crew raises the roof so it will be in position to l…
- Luckily, it was a beautiful day for a roof raising.
- Now the roof needs to be positioned exactly, so it will fit neatly on the building.
- The Finishing Touches
- The first tourist gets a closer look at the historical blockhouse.
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The University of Alaska Museum of the North is a popular visitor attraction, a vital component of the university and the only research and teaching museum in Alaska. The museum’s collection – 1.4 million artifacts and specimens – represents millions of years of biological diversity and thousands of years of cultural traditions. The collections are organized into 10 disciplines (archaeology, birds, documentary film, earth sciences, ethnology, fine arts, fishes, insects, mammals, and plants) and serve as a resource for research on climate change, contaminants and other issues facing the circumpolar North.