We have a traditional heritage whose origins are lost in the darkness of the times, so why let it waste into oblivion? This is probably what the manager of this traditional museum thought to himself.
This museum is built near my city. At the moment it only has one stone church and five houses but that is not the important bit here.
The important part is the story behind each rock, each piece of individual wood that makes the buildings and most importantly it's about the passion of a few men that don't want to let small pieces of history go to waste.
These houses are not replicas of similar houses from lost villages. These houses are bought sometimes from 200-300km away. Every piece of wood, every stone is numbered, then loaded into an old pick-up truck and transported here. Sometimes they make up to 20 round trips to transport all the pieces of the house.
After all the pieces are unloaded they sort everything out and start rebuilding. The museum is not yet completed. The process is very slow. Searching of a house takes a long time. It has to be well over 100 years and has to tell a story, it has to be piece of history. The manager is the one who does all the research, he travels hundreds of km to see the houses, he decides if a house is worthy of his little museum. He is a painter and everything he sales he puts back into the museum so people like you and me can visit a piece of the past...for free.
I would never imagined a museum like that! Awesome! The photos are great, the light is beautiful
Thank you so much! I thought the story behind it deserves some attention. The images were taken 2 hours ago at sunset :D
Damn, that's fast! xD
Haha a little
@raoul.poenar good initiative to keep traditions and documentary photography is perfect. Where is your town? in what part of the world is this museum made? I'm @carlosenrique and I follow you
Hey Carlos! The museum is in Orastie, Hunedoara County, Romania. Thanks for stopping by! :)
Lovely pictures. I wonder what it looks like on the inside. For 100 year old houses, they look pretty good.
Thank you so much! The houses are mostly empty inside...for the moment.
That's a great way to learn and imagine history :D I love the pictures!
Thank you so much!
What a unique museum! Those houses sure carry a lot of history in each and every piece.
Absolutely loving the warm light coupled with the snow! Beautiful work, Raoul :)