At home, my wife and I are in the process of replacing our current 160 year old farm house. Before the historic preservationists start beating down my door, take note the difference between historic and simply old. This house has a bad foundation, drafty windows, limited functional plumbing, and horribly obsolete wiring. It has served my family well for the past 5 generations, but it’s time has passed.
A friend of mine called me up one afternoon in September of last year, noting he had heard through the grape vine of a house that may be available soon. Being on a limited budget we jumped at the opportunity and made arrangements to see the house. Well long story short, we settled on the house and lined up the contractors, and we will soon have a 2 story house coming down our driveway.
I see this as the ultimate in resource conservation. The house we will be moving was built around the early 1900s, and is in great structural shape. Homes of this vintage are made of materials unavailable to the building market today. The framing lumber is largely well cured old growth lumber, and has been well maintained through the years. In my opinion it would be a shame to landfill or burn such a rare resource. With our replacement house secured, the next question became - What to do with the old house?
In our county zoning regulations allow for only one home per 20 acre parcel, so we have to remove the old house within one year of bringing in the replacement. With a bit of web searching I came across The Green Institute. After a week of phone and email tag I finally made contact with a representative from their “Deconstruction Service”. He described their services, and it sounded like a good fit for what we had in mind. The general idea being that we donate the building materials in our old house to them and in return we receive a tax deduction for the value of the lumber and building supplies they are able to salvage. They then sell that lumber to cover their expenses for the deconstruction service. There are a few more details, but that is the general process.
I know there are many old vacant barns and farm houses in the Three Rivers RC&D area collapsing from neglect. I would like to encourage any property owners in a similar situation to consider using any one of the building savage companies in Minnesota. It seems in many cases this is a good option to eliminate demolition costs while saving massive quantities of building material from the land fill. Check back later as I’ll be posting updates here and here as the process of house recycling unfolds…
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