OLD GROWTH LUMBER SCARCITY DRIVES CHOICES FOR CUSTOM WOOD TURNINGS (2/21/02)
A New Look At Materials and Procedures Can Help to Keep Turned Ornament Cost-Effective.
By John M. Corbett
The downward spiral of lumber quality caused by over harvesting of
old growth forests deprives all millwork producers of premium material
but none are more affected than producers of large turnings for exterior
work. Because turned architectural elements expose grain to the weather
in every direction, they require material of exceptional stability and
durability. New growth lumber can be well suited for many applications,
but due to its low annual ring density, it has only a portion of the
rot resistance of old growth lumber. By understanding how custom wood
turners cope with this scarcity and by developing new tastes and standards
for use of more readily available material, thoughtful designers continue
to specify serviceable, cost-effective turnings within these constraints.
STAVED COLUMNS SAVE WOOD Here a column is glued
and compressed out of vertical grain old growth redwood.
Photo by Fagan Design and Fabrication.
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The destruction of these vast sheltering groves is a sobering
achievement and one of special significance to builders because of the
major role this wood has played in the covering and ornamentation of
buildings in America. Substitute materials are on the market but the
cultural attachment to wood is so persistent that they can appear
glaringly out of place. This preference has helped to create a
flourishing popular market for production of turned period columns,
porch parts and finials that seems indifferent to the short life expectancy
of new growth turnings in highly exposed exterior applications. Whether
benefiting from a willful denial of present reality or from a more
conscious nostalgic recreation of a better, more abundant past, these
reproductions meet a need, they are affordable and there is plenty of
second growth forest from which to make replacements when they fail.
Their popularity further illustrates an eagerness for solutions that fit
the budget and look the way they are supposed to look, in the present.
This trend towards diminishing expectations is useful to note when
designing in an environment of diminished quality.
For more exacting custom reproduction elements, however, a
realistic acceptance of the limited service of new growth lumber is
becoming evident. According to custom column builder Jay Fagan of
Fagan Design and Fabrication, Inc. in West Haven, Connecticut there has
been a dramatic reduction of orders for exterior, paint grade columns
over the last ten years as a segment of the market seeks more durable,
affordable solutions. Growth in their stain grade interior work, however,
has more than made up for the loss and they are confident that there will
always be some exterior historic and new construction projects which will
find a way to assemble the budget to recreate traditional forms in traditional
materials. To make the most efficient use of scarce resources, Fagan's
columns are turned from a staved blank, constructed from a ring of
cambered staves glued into a cylinder. The staves are oriented directly
outward, presenting their most durable face to the weather. Taken as a
whole, the assembled blank is of uniform stability and thus more easily
turned than a solid or glued up blank which presents a full range of grain
orientations. The staving technique allows relatively narrow widths of
stock to be incorporated and thus makes efficient use of material.
Traditionally used for producing large columns, the technique produces
a lightweight, strong structural element with a useful interior chase for
structural or mechanical installations. Although labor intensive, as
lumber costs go up Fagan finds staving to be a cost effective option for
smaller and smaller columns. Jay Fagan observes that over the last half
dozen years he has seen the overall cost advantage of staved elements over
solid increase. Formerly, in any diameters under 8 inches, solid blanks held
the price advantage over a staved turning whereas now he can turn a column
as small as 4 inches at a lower cost than that of producing a solid element
of comparable quality.
JUST CHECKING Solid white oak columns season
in place. "Checking," cracks that develop as wood dries,
is part of the look for this country estate.
Photo by Eric J. Smith, Architects.
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More even than columns, decorative finials turned out of wood require
the highest lumber grade to furnish durable service. Unlike columns,
which are integrated into and protected by the building structure, turned
finials are solid, freestanding sculpture. Richard Swartwout of
New England Woodturners in Andover, Connecticut is able to turn solid
finials up to 18" on a custom built lathe. Solid construction presents
natural grain orientation, including vulnerable end grain, directly to
the weather in every direction, including upwards. According to Richard
Swartwout, the performance of such elements is decided by lumber selection.
Domestic old growth redwood has for some time been the standard choice
for durable exterior turnings and while reserves have become scarce
and expensive, imported mahogany and Spanish cedar are furnishing
serviceable substitutes. He builds glueups from vertical grained
lumber sized 8/4 to 12/4 but prefers the smaller sizes because they give
the millworker more control over selection, grain orientation and placement
of glue joints. He notes that compromise of lumber quality will directly
accelerate rot. Elements built from old growth stock will outlast any
other material, but if it is absolutely essential to cut costs on these
finials, it may be more cost effective to build them out of materials
other than wood.
New England Wood Turners and Fagan Design recently collaborated on a
custom design that they agree showed new uses for available resources.
As part of a renovation of a large, stone residence, they were asked to
fabricate twenty Tuscan columns out of solid white oak for use in a new
porch and entrance designed by Eric J. Smith, Architects, from New York City.
The column shafts were fifteen inches at the base by ten feet in length
tapering to twelve inches in diameter, classically proportioned and
furnished with capitals and bases. It was further specified that the
shafts were to be turned from green timber. The artisans protested that
such a large solid column turned from unseasoned material would check
severely as it cured and were told that that was the idea. It was
intended that the column should season and weather naturally, in place,
and remain unfinished except perhaps for a coat of oil or oil stain,
once the material had fully air dried.
Thus assured by the architect that the checking process was an intended
part of the design, the team of artisans proceeded, even though they felt
the material was better suited to a timber frame project than to a classical
column. New England Woodturners managed the project and Fagan Design
executed the turnings. The stock was selected from cants cut in Michigan
and sawn into octagons suitable for turning at broker Goodfellow Lumber's
mill in Delson, Quebec. Before shipment to Fagan, the octagons made a
stop at a boring specialist, each to receive a two inch hole up the center
to aid seasoning and thereby to relieve the stress of checking.
The turning itself turned out to be routine, with none of their concerns
about the unseasoned material causing cracking or unbalancing of the
work being realized. Once turned, the surface quickly dried to a
shallow depth allowing it to be sanded out to a very smooth finish.
The bases and capitals were glued up and turned out of kiln-dried
white oak to match.
Despite initial misgivings, the production team felt that the columns
worked quite easily and were very pleased to put their names on the
result. Delivered in May of last year, the architect reports that
checking of about 3/8" has so far appeared, well within the intended range.
How durable these columns will prove over time will depend in part on
their exposure to weather and building runoff. Their cost effectiveness
will be determined by their as yet unknown length of service balanced
against their low initial cost, about $2,000 each, negligible maintenance
costs and against their classic, elegant appearance. Jay Fagan is so
far impressed and anticipates that his company will get further orders
for "rustic" columns. He believes the approach is an affordable,
reasonably durable solution to furnishing custom classical ornament
for many projects.
Custom Woodturning Specialists:
New England Woodturners, Andover CT, Wood Turnings: Columns & Balusters.
Blueberry Woodworks, Plainfield MA, Porch posts, Columns, Stair Parts.
Amherst Woodworking and Supply, Northampton MA, Custom Millwork Packages.
Keith Cox-Architectural Wood Turning, Pelham MA, Wood Turning, Large Columns, Finials.
A. J. Stairs, Inc., Lakewood NJ, Stair Parts.
Honeoye Falls Millwork, Honeoye Falls NY, Large Column Specialists. Restoration.