The Southland Times

Working for a common cause . . .

MenzShed Invercargi­ll not only completes lots of woodwork projects a year, it’s providing an environmen­t for seniors to meet and work together.

- Jamie Searle jamie.searle@stuff.co.nz

MenzShed Invercargi­ll not only completes lots of woodwork projects a year, it’s providing an environmen­t for seniors to meet and work together.

It’s got 30 members but committeem­an Ken Bowie says the number will rise when the organisati­on moves from its Forth St workshop to a bigger building in Liddel St in May.

He and manager Peter Bailey agreed the move would enable more projects to be done and the introducti­on of the long awaited engineerin­g section.

‘‘As soon as we mention that we’re open for engineerin­g, there’s probably half a dozen guys, I know, ready to join,’’ Bowie said.

Trevor Wilkey, a former policeman and motor mechanic, joined MenzShed three months ago after moving from Bluff to Invercargi­ll. News of the engineerin­g department opening delighted him as he will be donating equipment to it.

He has no room in his town house to set up a workshop and is pleased to share his gear.

The camaraderi­e at MenzShed made it enjoyable, Wilkey said.

Assistant manager Nick Sarisa said MenzShed gave members a place to form friendship­s, help each other on projects and learned new ways to do things.

It’s a place retired people can go to, he said.

‘‘When they retire [some] people are sitting at home getting bored and that can lead to health problems. The health and welfare of the men is important to us.’’

Some members had ‘‘come out of their shells’’ with involvemen­t at MenzShed, Ken Bowie said.

Most of the members are retired tradesmen or had a handyman background. A few others came along just for the company.

Virtually all work done by members had been on woodwork projects since MenzShed Invercargi­ll opened three and a half years ago.

MenzShed was grateful for funding from the Invercargi­ll Licensing Trust, ILT Foundation and Community Trust South to enable it to move into a bigger building, Bowie said.

MenzShed took out a lease on an empty building on Liddel St on April 1 and members had begun changing the layout to suit the needs of the shed. The building is owned by the HW Richardson Group.

‘‘We’ve outgrown our current building faster than we anticipate­d,’’ Peter Bailey said.

‘‘We thought we’d be there for five or six years.

‘‘There’s not enough room [in the Forth St building].’’

 ?? KAVINDA HERATH/STUFF ?? MenzShed members Peter Bailey, left, and Kevin Joyce are among a team of workers changing an empty building in Liddel St, Invercargi­ll, into the organisati­on’s new headquarte­rs.
KAVINDA HERATH/STUFF MenzShed members Peter Bailey, left, and Kevin Joyce are among a team of workers changing an empty building in Liddel St, Invercargi­ll, into the organisati­on’s new headquarte­rs.
 ?? KAVINDA HERATH/STUFF ?? MenzShed Invercargi­ll members in the building they will soon move to in Liddel St.
KAVINDA HERATH/STUFF MenzShed Invercargi­ll members in the building they will soon move to in Liddel St.
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