Published March 16, 2015
#salvageservices / #throwback
2012 A Message from Second Use’s Salvage Services Manager
Now more than ever, we are focused on removing materials from your project site.
Read full postNow more than ever, we are focused on removing materials from your project site.
Read full postWhen Second Use employee Michael Greenwood informed the Harvey family about the bar, daughter Michelle Harvey rushed over. She was nearly brought to tears looking at the bar, thinking of her family’s memories of it, and the thought of it leaving the family again.
Read full postJust days after wrapping up work on the East Side Mansion, the Field Crew’s largest job ever, they’re back at it.
Read full postUnfortunately, a homeowner in the suburbs is demolishing a 25,000-square-foot home in order to build something different. Fortunately, this homeowner has called Second Use to salvage what we can before the structure goes down. The result is Second Use’s biggest project in our history.
Read full postIn an effort to gather materials in a place where it’s not as easy for people to salvage, Second Use will set up shop at Granny’s on Sunrise Ridge from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Read full post“I was a little nostalgic when I saw it,” he says. “It’s cool to see something that you made when you were 17, 20 years later.”
Read full postHomeowners often place newspaper underneath wood flooring during installation, largely to prevent squeaking. When you’re in the business of salvaging old flooring like we are, it’s common to come across these old newspapers.
Read full postEvery day, livable homes with usable building materials get demolished.
Read full postEarlier this summer, a group of 11 artists used five Capitol Hill homes to show off their craft. Rather than simply hanging paintings on the wall, they used less conventional methods to display their art, making the house part of the art.
Read full postChecking out the basement before the building would get demolished, he discovered some items that shouldn’t belong to Second Use showroom but instead should belong to the Washington State Historical Society.
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