Talk Back
Post a CommentHousingZone Most Popular Stories
- International Residential Codes Available Online
- Growing your remodeling business in the current economy
- 2008 Remodeler of the Year
- Develop Land Or Buy Lots? Home Builders Face Dilemma
- ProBuilder Product Report: Kitchen Appliances
- What Can You Recycle?
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
- Myths and Facts About Automatic Fire Sprinklers
- How to Use Percentage-of-Completion Accounting
Making What's Old New Again
Heather McCune, Editor in Chief
July 1, 2004
Luxury Home Builder
![]() |
Moving these large timbers around in China is done by hand, and at 1,200 pounds each, it requires great physical effort. |
Acquiring the timbers required perseverance and patience. Mountain Lumber purchased a dozen containers, holding 85 to 100 logs. Drake spent weeks negotiating the purchase with hundreds of different owners, all seeking their price.
![]() |
Willie Drake personally inspects each piece of Ancient Chinese Elm once it arrives in Virginia. It then goes to Mountain Lumber's sawmill for cutting, which then yields a deep butterscotch-colored beam. |
![]() |
![]() |
Drake traveled to China to recover the timbers and selected each log individually. Each timber was loaded by hand and trucked 1,500 miles across the Yellow and Yangtze rivers to the port at Canton. Once loaded on a merchant ship, the wood traveled half a world away to the port of Norfolk, Va.
In milling these giant beams, Mountain Lumber first checks for metal. While they rarely find a nail, "we find more embedded bullets than anything else," said Mountain Lumber's David Foky. "Our crews have found everything from ancient soft lead bullets to the more modern full metal jacket variety."
The Ancient Chinese Elm flooring is a rich butterscotch color with deep swirls of chocolate grain. The wood wears well because of its extreme hardness. Because of the size of the logs Drake found in China, the wood yields especially wide planks. Unlike historic heart pine, Mountain Lumber's specialty, machining the giant elm required resetting all the angles for the milling machines. "There is a cross graining in the way elm grows," Foky explains. "The pattern is a more complex weave than a straight grain."
To learn more about these giant timbers, go to www.mountainlumber.com.
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This



