Urban Wood

Urban Wood from Felled City Trees

In addition to our reclaimed woods and forested lumber, Urban Evolutions has introduced “urban wood” to our product line.

Our urban wood program involves working with municipalities to take possession of felled trees to create beautiful, live sawn wall paneling, flooring, and tabletops for commercial and residential spaces. A tree’s ability to absorb carbon throughout its life span makes them a vital resource in combating global warming.

Choosing reclaimed or urban wood for your project or product ensures that those trees continue to store their carbon well into the future. We are pleased to offer this local and sustainable alternative.

Read about the beauty and impact of urban wood below. Visit our blog to read about trends in sustainable design.

Flooring & Cladding

Veneer

Table Top

Table Gallery

The Beauty & Impact of Urban Wood

Felled City Trees
Urban Wood Slabs

Urban wood’s impact includes:  

  • keeping carbon from being released into the atmosphere (a process known as carbon sequestration)  
  • creating jobs  
  • diverting felled trees from landfills 
  • reusing lumber resources

Turning trees into solid wood products provides the only long-term carbon storage option. While many municipalities have begun recycling trees into mulch or firewood, our urban wood program keeps the wood in solid board form.

In addition, repurposing urban trees into solid boards has the biggest impact on job creation for local communitiesThe urban wood process requires labor to re-saw, defect and dry the lumber and employs craftsmen and women to create products ranging from flooring, wall and ceiling cladding, to tables and furnishings.   

Carbon Sequestration

Many of you know about carbon sequestration – in the case of salvaged wood, it is the natural process by which carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere by trees and held in solid form. The capture or sequestration of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere slows or may reverse atmospheric CO2 pollution, mitigating or potentially reversing global warming. 

Carbon sequestration, when it comes to wood, simply means salvaging and maintaining lumber in lumber form, rather than letting it burn or decompose in a landfill or as mulch.     

Reusing Lumber Resources

Reclaiming urban wood promotes reusing valuable lumber resources instead of cutting new growth timberFor every timber that is re-used in a home or commercial building, that is one less tree that is cut down from our forests. 

Less pressure on our forests allows us to plant more than we harvest and allows virgin trees to grow to full maturity before being harvested. 

Currently our forests are still only 66% of the land size they were in the 1850s. 

Diverting Waste From Landfills

Overall, wood accounts for around 10% of ALL material deposited in landfills annually.

Every year, the U.S. buries 33 million tons of wood-related construction and demolition debris in landfills, releasing five million tons of methane gas. Methane, by the way, releases 20 times more carbon than CO2 alone.   

Wood recycling rates are a dismal 31%. If you subtract the wood that is burned and mulched rather than reused, it drops to just 8%. As a comparison, concrete and structural steel recycling rates are over 82%. 

Choosing reclaimed or urban wood for your project or product ensures that those trees continue to store their carbon well into the future. We are pleased to offer this local and sustainable alternative.

For samples and pricing, please contact us.