Building materials get second life
By Dan MacArthur
Fossil Creek Current
Adam Bowman wants to give good used building materials a second chance
by reducing waste while supporting an alternative to demolishing old or
obsolete structures.
"What we really want to do is create a deconstruction industry in Fort
Collins," explained Bowen, manager of the nonprofit ReSource Fort Collins.
He secured grants from Larimer County, the Bohemian Foundation and the
Environmental Protection Agency to establish the enterprise.
ReSource Fort Collins accepts, solicits and salvages reusable building
material such as doors, windows, counters and hardwood flooring. Acceptable
items can be dropped off at a storage facility donated by Delta Construction
at 208 Racquette Drive or picked up for a $40 fee.
Those materials then are available for purchase at a cost typically 30
to 50 percent below retail. Bowen said the shopping experience is as varied
as the type of materials donated, with the stock changing daily.
He believes donations will come from conservation-minded builders, who
gain the added benefit of tax credits or reduced waste disposal costs.
Eventually, Bowen said, he hopes revenues from the retail operation will
support creation of a deconstruction crew that can travel to a job site
to carefully take apart buildings with an eye toward maximum reuse of the
salvageable materials.
ReSource Fort Collins is a project of the Boulder-based Center for ReSource
Conservation, which Bowen said annually diverts some two million pounds
of reusable building materials that otherwise would end up in the landfill.
"We could do the same amount in Fort Collins within two years," he predicted.
A Fort Collins resident since 1998, Bowen said he first became interested
in the concept while completing a "green building" course at Colorado State
University. "This is beginning a whole new adventure," he said.
Materials are accepted at the ReSource Fort Collins storage site by appointment
only by calling 498-9663.
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