Out of work? The building deconstruction industry is hiring!
This is a guest post by Dave Bennink, owner of Re-Use Consulting.
This last week has been full of bad news relating to major corporations cutting jobs. These job cuts are nothing compared to the amount of jobs that have been shipped overseas in the past decades. Did you know that the City of Buffalo used to have
600,000 people in it and now it only has about 290,000? First the jobs left and then the people followed. This has left Buffalo wondering what to do with tens of thousands of abandoned homes.So where are we heading? Jobs disappearing, economic slowdowns and global warming are just the start of our problems. Fortunately, there is some good news to share: The building deconstruction industry is creating thousands of green collar jobs, and these jobs cannot be shipped overseas!
For years, building deconstruction has been much slower and more expensive than demolition. Building deconstruction is the systematic disassembly of a structure to maximize reuse and recycling. In recent years, hybrid deconstruction has allowed deconstruction and adaptive reuse companies to take down buildings faster and cheaper, completing 2,000-square-foot homes in 3 to 4 days as one example. Even with these improvements, building deconstruction still creates 10 to 20 times more jobs than demolition while hoping to achieve an on-site landfill diversion rate of 70 percent or more (before comingled recycling options).
These are all local jobs that cannot be shipped overseas and we are working to make them living wage jobs requiring different levels of experience and potentially launching workers into other related careers.
One thing that is clear to me is that building owners don't want their structures demolished, they just want them removed. Almost everyone I have talked to would rather see the their building moved intact, deconstructed, or at least salvaged or even preserved in place through adaptive reuse as long as it doesn't take much more time and it doesn't cost more money. That helps the building deconstruction contractors by basing their efforts on a solid foundation.
People realize that deconstruction creates more jobs, helps the environment, preserves local architectural elements, and assists lower-income home owners to maintain their homes. It is also a sustainable effort, unlike some green solutions that just slow down the problems. Deconstruction is not just saving energy and resources compared to producing all of those materials new again, but reversing problems like global warming and natural resource depletion.
In Buffalo, we have begun to think of the streets full of abandoned homes as an asset to the community instead of a liability. If it is decided that they must be taken down, then by deconstructing them, some of the value they hold is returned to the community, and I can tell you after 16 years in this field, it's a great feeling knowing that you are making a difference.
I am excited about efforts by the city of Seattle and King County, among others, to promote building deconstruction.
The Building Materials Reuse Association is leading the way, holding a conference on the subject in Chicago in April 2009 (www.bmra.org). Cities and groups across the Country are starting job training programs by forming deconstruction crews. Demolition contractors are converting to deconstruction companies by performing deconstruction when their clients ask for it or it makes economic sense. General contractors hoping to keep their crews from quiting in slow times, are beginning to offer deconstruction to their clients, knowing that they may be able to provide work to their laid-off crews. Some schools are considering classes on deconstruction and some businesses are forming around the sales of the salvaged materials or the manufacturing of products (like tables, chairs, etc.) made from reclaimed materials.
So if you are tired of this economic slow down and want to make a difference, join us by considering building deconstruction and considering buying reclaimed materials. It's 'buying local' and 'employing local' all at the same time while heading toward our goal of zero waste.
- Dave Bennink, RE-USE Consulting
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February 4th, 2010 - 00:12
Great article, Dave. As extraction, shipping, and labor costs continue to rise, deconstruction and reuse become the thrifty building options. The City of Seattle has passed a salvage/deconstruction permit that allows salvage/decon companies to get the go ahead before the building permit is issued and the race is on. This is crucial for other municipalities and counties across the nation to implement to give the deconstruction industry those extra few days needed to save valuable materials from going to waste.
Builders still wonder if deconstruction can actually work but there are plenty of case studies out there. http://www.deconstructioninstitute.org has some good studies and http://www.re-store.org/deconstruction has a series of detailed decon case studies as well.
March 9th, 2011 - 19:51
Is there anything going on in the northern California area.