There’s a lumbermill right in the middle of Cleveland.
Dean Heidelberg, who grew up in Lakewood, has created a company called
Metro Hardwoods where he takes logs from trees that have been taken
down in the greater Cleveland area and mills them into lumber that can
be used for everything from shipping pallets to fine furniture and lots
in between.
Lumbermill in the city
In a time when we are pressing for the expansion of certified forests
around this country to protect old growth timber, there is a growing
amount of lumber right before our eyes which often ends up as mulch,
but which could be milled into useful building materials.
Dean
gets most of his logs from cities in Cuyahoga County and from tree companies
who take down trees. He likes to get them in lengths of at least 5 feet
or more, so the wood is more useful.
The biggest challenge he faces in cutting up the logs from local sources
are the number of nails and other metal objects that have been imbedded
in the trees over the years. A perfectly good saw blade can be destroyed
in an instant so Dean uses a metal detector to check over a log before
putting it up on his massive saw table.
Most of the wood he gets is oak (60-70%), but he gets some maples and
walnut. Cottonwood trees provide pallet material, though he wants to
keep focused on the better woods in the future. Once the wood is cut,
he puts it into a vacuum press dryer which dries the wood much faster
than just stacking it and letting it dry.
Most
of the wood is shaped into 1 x stock, but he does do some 4 x 4 and
larger stock. He creates no framing lumber. His next major experiment
will be creating hardwood flooring. The better grade woods are used
for cabinetry, but this leaves a lot of wood with some tight knots in
it that could be used for tongue and groove flooring. He has the equipment
to do this and will soon be setting up production.
Metro Hardwood is located at
5901 Train Ave. on the nearwest side. The next time you have to remove
a tree or the city is about to take a tree down in front of your house,
ask where the tree goes and what is done with it. If it is just going
to be chipped up for mulch, ask if it can be taken to Metro Hardwoods.
You can help extend the life of that tree for another generation through
the materials it produces.
(http://www.metro-hardwood.com).
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