Ambulances are normally associated with medical care, but in Romania, a different kind of ‘ambulance’ is racing to save the life of historical structures. In 2016, architect Eugen Vaida founded Ambulance for Monuments. Starting with a tool-filled truck, he roamed Romania repairing neglected historical buildings and monuments with the help of volunteers. Now, some five years later, Vaida has seven trucks, 500 volunteers and has saved 60 structures, including medieval churches, ancient windmills and castles. Various sponsors help bankroll the project, and local communities donate food and housing to the volunteers, while local governments supply construction materials. “It works similarly to an emergency medical intervention,” Vaida says. “There is an ambulance that comes to the site, assesses the damage, stabilises the patient, and then the patient is ready for treatment.”…