Eve,
Just to give you the correct picture of what might happen.
The queen (which has hibernated through the winter)will construct a small nest usually with materilas immediately to hand (or leg!) - they often like to take over disused mouse nests.
The queen will raise the first few workers on her own and will then become the egg layer or queen proper remaining in the brood nest for the rest of the season, with her worker offspring carrying out all the other duties.
Dependant on species there may be 200-300 workers, sometimes more, often less (there may be 50,000 workers in a honey bee colony, as a comparison).
The workers are all females and the males will be raised later in the season, before the last cycle of brood are developed into sexually mature females - new queens.
These queens will mate with drones and later the nest will break down, the workers and drones and the old queen will die off in the late summer/early autumn.
The mated queens will continue to build up body mass to sustain them through the winter and finally they will individually find a well protected refuge where they will hibernate until the following spring.
They usually bury themselves deep in a north facing bank, so they are not roused too early in the next spring by, say, just a few days of warm sunshine.
The cycle then repeats.
Hope that helps, and forewarns you of how the nest will likely develop.
Regards, RAB