Published April 06, 2008 09:01 pm - Cedar Knoll Log Homes includes a number of green practices in its day to day operation.
Local log home manufacturer environmentally friendly
Staff Writer
Cedar Knoll Log Homes embraces environmentally friendly practices
By DAN HEATH
PLATTSBURGH -- A local log-home manufacturer is greener than the leaves of its trees.
Cedar Knoll Log Homes employs several environmentally friendly practices in its business model. Owner Ron Marx said the company, located on Military Turnpike in Plattsburgh, finds uses for all of its by-products, including scrap lumber, sawdust and shavings.
"Our goal is to avoid wasting any of it," he said.
When Cedar Knoll peels the bark and outer layer of wood from its logs, that material is moved into a mulch pile.
"In the spring, we grind it up, and it goes back into the world as mulch."
The mulch is sold locally, he said.
Sawdust and shavings are blown through Cedar Knoll's automatic-collection system to a storage building. Cedar Knoll has a contract to supply the material to Carter Farms on Moffitt Road in Plattsburgh, where it is used for bedding for the cows.
Larger pieces of scrap wood are saved and used to help heat the Cedar Knoll kilns and buildings.
Wins award
The company won an award from New York state on Oct. 25, 2002. The Governor's Waste Reduction and Recycling Award for Woodworking was given to the business based on efforts that resulted in saving 4,000 board feet of waste per day.
Marx said that when his employees make cuts on logs, the first slab cut off in the shape of an arc contains wood that would otherwise be wasted. The end pieces are converted into wood chips, but the middle section is processed into wainscoting.
Green-certified lumber
For the past four years, Cedar Knoll has been involved with the Sustainable Forest Initiative. The company buys its green-certified white cedar lumber from J.D. Irving Limited, a Sustainable Forest Initiative-certified company based in St. John, New Brunswick.