Working with deconstruction crews yields higher-quality stock and richer context. Slow disassembly preserves beam lengths, brick faces, and architectural details that are often crushed by excavators. We request photos of sites, tag bundles to locations, and gather anecdotal accounts from workers. This practice reduces landfill volumes, supports skilled jobs, and gives us reliable material profiles that simplify both engineering calculations and client conversations.
Invoices, weigh tickets, chain-of-custody forms, and mill stamps are more than bureaucracy; they are anchors of trust. We compile them into a concise dossier for every batch, noting species, prior use, finishes, and treatments. When the paper is thin, we corroborate with interviews and third-party testing. Clients appreciate transparency, insurers relax, and future caretakers inherit clear guidance rather than guesswork and conflicting memories.
Reclaimed stock can fluctuate in quantity and dimension. We budget contingencies for milling loss, hidden defects, and compatible substitutions. By designing modular details, we absorb variance without aesthetic compromise. Clear allowances, staged deposits, and samples reduce stress. The reward is singular character that new materials cannot replicate, alongside meaningful carbon savings that align with evolving regulations and conscientious client priorities.