Teen Craft & Trade Intensives
Hands-On Summer Programs in Boston
Join North Bennet Street School’s Teen Craft & Trade Intensives this summer! Designed for rising high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors, these week-long programs offer an exciting introduction to hands-on trades and crafts in a supportive, small-class setting.
Led by expert NBSS faculty and alumni, students will develop real-world skills, expand their network, and create something with their hands—all while exploring career pathways in the skilled trades. All classes take place at our award-winning 64,000 sf facility in Boston’s historic North End neighborhood.
Summer 2025 Intensives
- Session 1, Monday, July 14 – Friday, July 18: Carpentry
Discover fundamental skills in framing, construction techniques, and using hand and power tools to build structures. - Session 2, Monday, July 21 – Friday, July 25: Woodworking & Furniture Making
Learn the basics of fine woodworking, furniture making, and joinery while working with hand tools and machinery. - Session 3, Monday, July 28 – Friday, August 1: Jewelry Making
Explore the world of jewelry with the knowledge and skills to create your own handcrafted jewelry. - Session 4, Monday, August 4 – Friday, August 8: Preservation Carpentry
Dive into historic preservation, learning how to restore and protect old buildings, woodwork, and structures. - Session 5, Monday, August 11 – Friday, August 15: Bookbinding
Learn the basics of bookmaking, from folding and stitching pages to designing and binding your own handmade books.
“This was an opportunity to learn more about the field and see what I wanted to do in the future… NBSS is a great place to go.”
Pricing & Scholarships
- Each week-long session will cost $750 per student.
- Full and partial scholarships are available.
- Space is limited to just 6-8 students per session.
- All tools and supplies will be provided for each session.
Daily Schedule
- Drop Off: 8:45 – 9:00 am
- Morning Class Hours: 9:00 am – 12:30 pm
- Lunch: 12:30 – 1:00 pm
- Afternoon Class Hours: 1:00 – 4:00 pm
- Pick Up: 4:00 – 4:15 pm
How to Apply
Students interested in attending one or more sessions should fill out the application, which also includes scholarship consideration. An application does not guarantee a spot in the program.
Early Application Deadline: Monday, March 31, 2025
The first round of applicants will be notified of their status by Friday, April 25, 2025.
Standard Application
- Following the early deadline, applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis until the program reaches capacity. Need-based financial aid will continue to be awarded as funds remain available.
- Applicants who apply after the early deadline will be notified of their status no later than two weeks after submitting an application.
- Those who apply after a session is full will be placed on a waitlist.
Program Details & Instructors
Instructor: Peter Smith PC ’04
Teaching Assistant: TBD
Class Description: This week-long intensive introduces students to floor and wall framing while providing hands-on experience with power tools. With a strong emphasis on safety and teamwork, students will learn to plan, assemble, and level a floor system, as well as lay out and construct wall framing and headers. The curriculum also covers essential topics such as creating a cut list, understanding wood technology, applying basic math, and measuring for construction. Students will gain practical skills using a variety of power tools including an impact driver, sliding compound saw, table saw, drill driver, chop saw, and more.
Students should be able to safely lift or maneuver tools and materials weighing up to 50 lbs.
Instructor Bio: Peter is the Department Head of the Carpentry career training program and a 2004 graduate of the Preservation Carpentry program. He brings extensive industry experience from his recent role at custom building and design firm David E. Lanoue, Inc., as well as supervisory experience with NBSS interns at Mt. Lebanon Shaker Village. Additionally, Peter has a background as a camp counselor and public school teacher, enriching his approach to both instruction and mentorship.
Instructor: Ellen Kaspern CF ’03
Teaching Assistant: TBD
Class Description: In this week-long intensive workshop, students will build foundational skills essential to traditional woodworking and furniture making. Based on a modern nightstand designed by the instructor, students will gain hands-on experience with both machine and hand tools, ensuring they develop safe and comfortable practices while mastering time-tested techniques. The skills learned in this class can be applied to larger projects such as cases and tables. By the end of the course, each student will complete their very own modern nightstand.
Instructor Bio: Ellen is a custom furniture maker, a full-time Instructor in the Cabinet & Furniture Making career training program, and a 2003 graduate of NBSS. With 20 years of teaching experience, she has taught at institutions including NBSS, Massachusetts College of Art & Design, Peters Valley School of Craft, Yestermorrow Design Build School, and the Florida School of Woodwork. Ellen is widely recognized for her woodworking demonstrations throughout New England and has presented at venues such as the National Museum of Industrial Industry, Boston Design Week, Boston Athenaeum, Peabody Essex Museum, Old Sturbridge Village, and the Society of Arts & Crafts. She has written articles for Fine Woodworking magazine and Woodcraft magazine, and many of her lessons are featured in instructional videos for Fine Woodworking.
Instructor: Colleen Matthews JM ’12
Teaching Assistant: TBD
Class Description: This week-long intensive will focus on the basics of jewelry fabrication and design. Students will move through a series of beginner-level projects where they will build essential jewelry making skills through sawing, filing, measuring, drilling, basic forming, and an introduction to torch soldering.
Instructor Bio: Colleen is a New England-based artist with a lifelong passion for creating and collecting objects. She studied sculpture at The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, where she discovered her love of metalsmithing. The process of creating objects with fire seemed so alluring, an age-old art form that still was very true to its origin. After working as a woodworker, a gardener, and as a jeweler, Colleen deepened her skills in the traditional art of jewelry making by enrolling in the Jewelry Making & Repair program at NBSS. It was there she was able to fine-tune her hand skills and learn more techniques in stone setting and fabrication. Since graduating in 2012, she has worked for several jewelers in the Boston area and now maintains her own jewelry collection.
Instructor: Sophie Linnell PC ’21
Teaching Assistant: TBD
Class description: In this week-long intensive course, students will work independently and in collaboration to explore construction methods of pre-20th-century New England dwellings. Through hands-on, on-site fieldwork and live demonstrations, students will work together to raise a timber frame while learning traditional building methods such as mortise and tenon construction, historic sheathing, cladding, lime plaster application, and masonry. Besides learning important hand-building skills, students will also learn about architectural history and ideas. This knowledge will help them understand how to carefully preserve old buildings and their stories.
Instructor Bio: Sophie is a Boston-based preservation carpenter and sculptor. After earning her B.A. in Studio Art & Design, she worked for a college art program in Italy before returning to the U.S. to work as a stonemason. Sophie completed the NBSS Preservation Carpentry program and has since collaborated with Owlsworth Conservation, MLB Restorations, and Matt Diana Housewright. In addition to her extensive fieldwork, she teaches a wide range of undergraduate, graduate, and continuing education courses: Architectural Design/Build, Sculptural Architecture, Historic Timber Framing, Preservation Carpentry Intensive, 3D Art & Design, Woodcarving, and Sculpture.
Instructor: Colin Urbina BB ’11
Teaching Assistant: TBD
Class Description: This week-long intensive focuses on the basics of bookbinding structure and design. Students will make some non-adhesive structures and case bindings while utilizing different sewing variations, covering, and cutting techniques using different materials, tools, and equipment to create a uniquely designed series of books.
Instructor Bio: Colin is a graduate of the NBSS Bookbinding program and runs Low Mountain Bindery in Boston’s Fort Point neighborhood. He has studied books since 2002 and has been a professional bookbinder since 2011. Colin is a proud graduate of Hampshire College, Simmons College’s GSLIS program, and North Bennet Street School. In addition to his formal education, he has attended workshops with many talented and innovative binders. In his shop, he makes and repairs books, crafts boxes to hold special books, and enjoys doodling in his spare time.
Have questions? Please email us at ce@nbss.edu.
More Information
- Cancellation requests received at least 60 days or more before the class start date will receive a full refund less a $45 cancellation fee.
- Cancellation requests received at least 30 days before the class start date will receive a 50% refund, less a $45 cancellation fee.
- Refunds are not given for cancellations received less than 30 days before the class start date.
- North Bennet Street School reserves the right to cancel a class 10 days before the class start date if 50% enrollment is not met. If NBSS cancels the class, a full refund will be processed.
- Cancellations for Scholarship Recipients: If a student can not attend the intensive they received a scholarship for, they need to make a formal request for cancellation to ce@nbss.edu two weeks prior to the intensive start date. This will ensure that we are able to award the scholarship spot to an applicant on the waitlist.
Location
North Bennet Street School
150 North Street
Boston, MA 02109
Transportation
- Public Transit: We are conveniently located near multiple service routes, and the neighborhood is very walkable. The closest MBTA stop is Haymarket on the Orange and Green Lines, and the Aquarium stop on the Blue Line is slightly further away. There are also several options for bus service. We recommend checking the MBTA’s website in advance of travel to make sure all services are running properly. Also, check to see if your teen qualifies for a student discount.
- Biking: If you plan to bike to the school, we have a bicycle rack located across from our building where you can lock your bike. Our facility is also near several Bluebike bike share stations.
- Driving: The School does not have a dedicated parking lot, and on-street parking in the North End can be difficult to find. If you plan to drive and park, you will likely need to park in one of the nearby garages and walk to the School.
- We validate Haymarket Center parking garage (also known as the Parcel 7 Garage at 98 Haymarket Square) as follows:
- $1 for up to 2 hours; $3 for up to 3 hours; Longer than 3 hours is $10/hour with no validation discount, capping at $33 for 5-24 hours.
- Note: We can validate your ticket at the front desk anytime after you arrive at the garage, but the validation timing begins when you enter the garage. So your total stay in the garage must be 3 hours or under to apply discounted pricing.
- Another option is Lewis Wharf Parking at 641 Lewis Wharf. Rates are: $13 for 1 hour, $18 for 1½ hours, $25 for 10 hours, $30 for 24 hours. If you park before 9 am and are out by 6 pm M-F, the early bird rate is $20 for 10 hours.
- We validate Haymarket Center parking garage (also known as the Parcel 7 Garage at 98 Haymarket Square) as follows:
- Students will sign in with our front desk staff member at the beginning of each day.
- Students who have been permitted to sign themselves out at the end of the day by a parent or guardian will be dismissed from class by their instructor and will sign out with our front desk staff member before leaving for the day.
- Students who will be picked up by a parent or guardian will be dismissed from class by their instructor and will wait indoors in the school’s lobby until their parent or guardian has arrived and signed them out with our front desk staff member. Students will only be released to an individual on their pickup list.
Daily Schedule
- Drop Off: 8:45 – 9:00 am
- Morning Class Hours: 9:00 am – 12:30 pm
- Lunch: 12:30 – 1:00 pm
- Afternoon Class Hours: 1:00 – 4:00 pm
- Pick Up: 4:00 – 4:15 pm
Weather permitting, students will have supervised snack and lunch breaks outside across from North Bennet Street School at The Rose Kennedy Greenway. Some intensives will be inviting a guest instructor, while others may take an off-site supervised field trip. Field trip details will be shared with parents or guardians ahead of time.
- Lunch (a refrigerator and microwave will be available to students)
- A refillable water bottle
- Snacks will be provided for all students
- Closed-toe, comfortable, and protective footwear (sneakers or boots)
- No loose clothing
- Long pants suggested
- No loose jewelry
- Long hair must be tied back
Safety is prioritized at North Bennet Street School, and it is built into every class curriculum. Students should follow their instructors’ and teaching assistants’ guidance on safe usage of equipment and tools. Students will be directed to wear additional safety gear such as hearing protection, eye protection, etc., as needed by their instructors.
To ensure additional attention is given to safety, there will be no student cell phone use during class hours.
- Please visit the school’s website for Health & Safety guidance.
- Please contact the Director of Community Education, Brittany Carlson at bcarlson@nbss.edu if you need to discuss a student’s medication or accommodations.