Posts Tagged ‘building materials’

I (Heart) Wood

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Serving Window
Until I started this latest project, I forgot how much I enjoy working with wood. All building materials have their pros and cons. As much as I hate concrete, I readily admit that for certain jobs it’s perfect, and as much as I love cob, I’ll also admit that it’s got its drawbacks, namely how labor-intensive it is. But wood? I can think of very few negative aspects of building with wood other than the lack of foresight involved in its harvesting and the wastefulness surrounding its use on a typical construction site. If you use wood that has been harvested in a sustainable manner, i.e. only cutting down trees of a certain size and then replacing them with saplings, and find a use for every bit of the tree, you’re not going to find a better building material.

As much as I can, I try to use building materials that are locally sourced, which here in Texas means using mainly oak, cedar, and mesquite. Ideally, I would be felling and milling the trees myself. Cutting out the middlemen, in this case the lumberyards, would cut down on the total amount of embodied energy expended in the process as well as the monetary costs, which is how Matt was able to trim his entire house several years ago. His uncle harvested thousands of square feet of wood from his property in Ohio and gave enough to Matt to allow him to redo the trim on all 44 windows inside his house. Oh, what I would give to have such an uncle right about now.

On the Austin Permaculture listserv I did hear of a woman in East Texas who was offering to let anyone come to her property and harvest trees that had been downed by Hurricane Katrina. Unfortunately, hauling that much wood to Austin would require the use of an ungodly amount of gas. Would the procurement of that much sustainably harvested wood offset the amount of energy I would spend hauling it all the way to Austin? I don’t know. When it comes to building materials, there are no easy answers.