Advertisement
Cheap greenhouse made from discarded trampoline
forums.gardenweb.com/forums/...090.html
Here's a cool forum called "Garden Junk" where readers post messages and pics of their recycled and dumpster-dived finds. Many are for garden decoration, but some are building materials, ideas for sheds, etc.
forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/junk/
forums.gardenweb.com/forums/...090.html
Here's a cool forum called "Garden Junk" where readers post messages and pics of their recycled and dumpster-dived finds. Many are for garden decoration, but some are building materials, ideas for sheds, etc.
forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/junk/
Advertisement
Advertisement
-
Luna Parc
Sun, June 24, 2007 - 11:02 PMIt looks like it should be tucked away in the remote wilderness of Australia or New Zealand or some such place, but it's in....New Jersey. LOL.
www.lunaparc.com/index.shtml
-
Re: Using Recycled and Found Objects
Sun, January 13, 2008 - 7:12 PMThere are two new photos of a home in Lexington, Massachusetts which includes recycled materials from Boston's "Big Dig" public works project.
Here's a link to one article:
www.treehugger.com/files/20...g_get.php -
-
Re: Using Recycled and Found Objects
Sun, January 13, 2008 - 7:26 PMMore links to stories on the house built with Big Dig materials.
www.jetsongreen.com/2007/11/...ycli.html
www.boston.com/realestate...tery_built/
Notable is the fact that this house is around 4,300 sq feet or so, as I recall. The news articles tout that it was built for "only" $150 per sq feet...in my opinion, $645,000 for construction isn't exactly cheap. These recycled materials were free, because the home owner/builder was a principal contractor on Big Dig...imagine what this would've cost if he'd had to buy them, even as salvage.
-