[Greenbuilding] Mold resistant wood?
Jason Holstine
jasonh at amicusdb.com
Thu Jul 12 23:26:55 EDT 2007
Personally, my first choice would be one of the composites, like Trex, Bear
Board, etc. Trex is made in Northern Virginia, some others in PA, Northeast,
etc. so relatively close to NY. No version of lumber regardless of source,
cert or distance. Will last min 30 years. No refinishing, painting, or
sealing. No splinters. Lots of looks and colors now. Some are easy to find
others not so much. The Healthy Building Network pdf mentioned earlier is a
great resource. You can Google for company websites and info.
Jason Holstine
Amicus Green Building Center
t: 301-571-8590
f: 301-571-8597
e: jason at amicusgreen.com
www.amicusgreen.com
-----Original Message-----
From: greenbuilding-bounces at listserv.repp.org
[mailto:greenbuilding-bounces at listserv.repp.org] On Behalf Of Stephen Levine
Architects
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2007 2:20 PM
To: Greenbuilding at listserv.repp.org
Subject: [Greenbuilding] Mold resistant wood?
I am trying to detail a concrete shower receptor that will have wood
duckboards as base.
Are there any woods that have inherent mold resistance? Any other insights
or cautions?
Stephen Levine
Stephen Levine Architects
130 West 25th Street
Suite 500
New York, NY 10001
_______________________________________________
Greenbuilding email list
List info:
http://listserv.repp.org/mailman/listinfo/greenbuilding_listserv.repp.org
List email: Greenbuilding at listserv.repp.org
Managed by BuildingGreen, Inc. http://www.buildinggreen.com
publisher of Environmental Building News and GreenSpec(r)
Hosted and archived by REPP / CREST http://www.crest.org
More information about the Greenbuilding
mailing list