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A lounge chair using reclaimed wood. Reclaimed lumber is processed wood retrieved from its original application for purposes of subsequent use. Most reclaimed lumber comes from timbers and decking rescued from old barns, factories and warehouses, although some companies use wood from less traditional structures such as boxcars, coal mines and wine barrels.
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Many terms are used to refer to people who salvage recyclables from the waste stream for sale or personal consumption. In English, these terms include rag picker, reclaimer, informal resource recoverer, binner, recycler, poacher, salvager, scavenger, and waste picker; in Spanish cartonero, chatarrero, pepenador, clasificador, minador and reciclador; and in Portuguese catador de materiais ...
The Tuttle Farm includes a modern upscale 10,000-square-foot (930 m 2) retail facility constructed in 1987 adjoining an old New England barn, the original "Tuttle's Red Barn". [4] It now conducts business as Tendercrop Farm at the Red Barn. It also offers a variety of groceries, plants, gift items, and gourmet foods from many countries. [6]
The reclaimer structure can be of a number of types, including portal and bridge. Reclaimers are named based on their type, for example, "Bridge reclaimer." Portal and bridge reclaimers can both use either bucket wheels or scrapers to reclaim the product. Bridge type reclaimers blend the stacked product as it is reclaimed.
Blue Hill at Stone Barns. Stone Barns Center for Food & Agriculture is a non-profit farm, education and research center located in Pocantico Hills, New York.The center was created on 80 acres (320,000 m 2) formerly belonging to the Rockefeller estate.
One man’s trash is another man’s treasure. A longtime New York-based art dealer stumbled upon a painting at a Hamptons barn sale for which he paid just $50 — and now the rare piece is ...
Barn raising was particularly common in 18th- and 19th-century rural North America. A barn was a necessary structure for any farmer, for example for storage of cereals and hay and keeping of animals. Yet a barn was also a large and costly structure, the assembly of which required more labor than a typical family could provide.