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Beautiful Lumber from Once-Beautiful Trees
Upcycling harvested wood from our communities celebrates local history and extends the tree’s story for future generations to cherish. Instead of chipping urban logs into mulch or chopping for firewood, there is a growing trend to divert that good wood to a local sawmill to mill logs into lumber.
Urban wood is a plentiful, local, renewable resource with unique character. Woodworkers, designers, artists, homeowners and business owners can create customized looks with rich colors, unique grain patterns, knots, or branching patterns found in community trees for bookcases, tables, mantels, flooring, trim or cabinets.
The DNR forestry program is working to connect people all along the supply chain to build community, business and consumer interest to embrace this untapped potential.
Learn more about how homeowners, communities and businesses are crafting fallen trees in their locales in the Summer Iowa Outdoors Magazine.
Back to topSorting for the Best Use of Each Community Tree
A community tree has value at every stage of its life. Its story does not have to end when it must be taken down because of disease, storm damage or development plans.
Different parts of a fallen tree can be separated into piles for reuse and to reduce waste. Portions of trees are best converted to wood chips, compost and mulch—think twigs, branches and limbs. But trunks, if not hollow, can be rescued and lumbered.
According to the U.S. Forest Service, if recovered and repurposed, wood from our country’s urban forests could produce nearly 4 billion board feet of lumber each year.
Back to topSupport Wood Recycling in Your Community
- Select local lumber for home improvement projects from area sawmills and the Habitat for Humanity ReStores in Des Moines and Iowa City.
- Choose arborists, tree care companies and sawmills that reuse wood responsibly.
- Learn more about wood characteristics of urban trees. No two wood grains are exactly alike, but each tree species has characteristics that set its wood apart
For example, in Ames, urban logs removed in accordance with a management plan and city purchasing guidelines helps reclaimed wood be used for home improvement products. The result is less woody debris that the city has to pay to have mulched, and it builds a sustainable community.
In Davenport, a collaboration with Public Works uses all tree waste in products they produce. Systems are in place to use all wood from a tree, helping support sustainable community growth in regards to how they handle their trees. Learn more about Davenport's program.
Back to topLocal Use is Good Use
Every tree that shades our yards and public parks has a story. Lovingly planted and nurtured, it grew for decades and sometimes over a century. It’s a celebration of local history, a natural fixture in a park, along a street, in a backyard or alongside a school.
Recycled wood from community trees can boost local economies, strengthen sustainability commitments, reduce expenses for communities, and enhance our living spaces.
Capturing the highest and best use of removed urban trees reduces the strain on our natural habitats and forests to supply us with usable wood products and building materials.
Buying local lumber for your wood use needs whenever possible is a step towards becoming a more sustainable community. With its beautifully unique appearance, it creates one-of-a-kind home products, while supporting local businesses.
Back to topPublications & Resources
- Urban Tree Outlets Iowa [PDF]
- Wood Based Businesses in Iowa
- Urban Wood Network
- Urban Tree Brochure [PDF]
- Wood Characteristics of Common Urban Trees [PDF]