One shared place. Four braided pillars.

NNEST is being designed as an integrated system. The pillars aren't separate programs competing for space — they're woven together into the ordinary rhythm of a shared place.

Nature-Based Wellbeing

Places and programs that intend to restore the nervous system, build resilience, and reconnect people with the land.

  • Sensory and regulation spaces
  • Forest therapy sessions
  • Gentle movement and wellbeing programs
  • Trauma-aware support
  • Spaces for carers, NDIS groups and families

Environmental Education & Citizen Science

Hands-on, place-based learning for kids, adults, schools, and visitors — deeply rooted in the forest around us.

  • Outdoor classrooms and bush-kinder
  • Fungi, wildlife and biodiversity programs
  • Water testing, flora surveys and citizen science
  • Partnerships with landcare, conservation groups and schools

Creative & Practical Skills

A working makerspace and creative hub where elders' knowledge, young people's energy, and new ideas can meet.

  • A makerspace for woodwork, craft, upcycling and repair
  • Art workshops and creative residencies
  • Intergenerational knowledge-sharing
  • Community cooking, preserving and traditional skill programs

Community-Led Design & Facilitation

A Victorian-first capability: NNEST is intended to be not just built by the community, but continuously shaped by it — coordinating Expressions of Interest, designing room usage and scheduling, supporting conflict resolution and membership growth, and practising ongoing adaptive design.

The spaces — Noojee Library, proposed Stage 1

  • A welcoming hub
  • Sensory and quiet rooms
  • A makerspace
  • Flexible program rooms
  • Outdoor learning areas
  • A shared kitchen and gathering space
  • Field hub facilities

A day in the life

A homeschool group uses the outdoor classroom in the morning. A sensory-safe session runs in a quiet room in the afternoon. A woodwork workshop runs next door. A carer drops in for a cup of tea and a wellbeing program. A visiting landcare group uses the field hub as a base before heading into the forest. An artist in residence teaches an evening class.

A model for other regional towns

The former Primary School site offers long-term room to grow — and NNEST is designed to be a replicable model for regional Victorian towns facing similar transitions.