A company in North Carolina is making some good things from urban trees which have to be cut down for one reason or another: high-end lumber from what was once considered good only for firewood or mulch. They process 15,000 to 20,000 board feet a year of local urban lumber from private land for use in homes, sheds, barns, farms, or woodworking projects.
It's estimated that 2 million board feet of lumber is wasted annually in the local landfills in the Charlotte metro area due to storms, land clearing, maintenance, or disease. I'm sure much the same can be said for other cities.
Anyone doing good things with unwanted wood in your neighborhood?
Comments
View as Threaded
Pangolin Posted 5:41 pm
12 Apr 2008
If the person appears to go along they snatch the valuable wood for furniture and gun stocks and skeedadle frequently leaving waste behind.
Always call your city public works department and confirm that removal of your street trees is scheduled and necessary if you have any questions. Make the call yourself, rather than letting the foreman lend you his phone.
Better safe than sorry.
Put the Carbon Back
Permalink
Tasermons Partner Posted 5:53 pm
12 Apr 2008
It's especially popular with old christmeas or pine trees.
Permalink
x2fer Posted 5:44 pm
13 Apr 2008
<http://www.urbanlumbercompany.com>
Permalink
ecology Posted 4:17 am
14 Apr 2008
The Pittsfield Elm was a very special tree, more so than many street trees, but treecycling is a great idea. It fits into contemporary discourses about DIY, life cycle of materials, and greenhouse gas reduction (landfills contribute a lot of methane).
Some folks at the City of Boston considered a treecycling program. I think it is fair to assume that in older cities, overmature trees make up the greater share of a city's street tree population (see Maco and McPherson 2002), so there are numerous opportunities to recycle urban wood. (Check out UFEI's urban wood website.)
local ecology
http://localecology.org
Permalink
Erik Hoffner Posted 5:20 am
14 Apr 2008
Enjoyed your article in Human Flower Project, btw:
http://www.humanflowerproject.com/index.php/weblog/street ...
Interesting to read about Oakland's urban tree list. Too bad madrone's not on there. One of my favorite native CA trees, so cool to look at, and so cool to the touch. When I taught envi education in CA for a while, that was one of the kids' favorite things, the 'refrigerator tree.'
Erik
The Orion Grassroots Network: 1,200+ grassroots groups working for conservation & more
Permalink