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NYC Manhole Cover Table

DPW_table_features_1024x1024The DPW Table by Miles & May, with covers supplied by Sawkill Lumber Co.

H: 19.5″  W: 24″  L: 24″*                                                                                                                                 Materials:  Reclaimed NYC manhole covers and polished stainless steel                                               Finishes:  Brushed stainless steel                                                                                                              *Dimensions may vary by approximately 1″

List price:  $2185
 
MADE IN USA
 
In stock items ship in approximately 10 days
Items not in stock ship in approximately 6 – 8 weeks

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Longleaf Pine 4 x 13.5 x 20′

4x13.5Pine_009

4” x 14” x 20′ Old growth figure and color. 1880-90’s warehouse buildings. White wash over sawn mark surface. Gentle hand demolition and crane removal yielded very sound lumber. Moderate nail pattern and x-bracing removed from two faces. Timbers are versatile for re-saw, beam stock, wide plank, dirty top, 3 1/4” vertical, etc. Shipped from Northeast. 

 

 

 

Redwood (Sequoiadendron giganteum)

sequoyaRedwoods are the skyscrapers of treedom,  reaching the height of a twenty-five story building, with trunks that cover the footprint of a tenement house. As iconic on the American landscape today as the Empire State Building. Redwoods once grew all throughout the northern hemisphere. Now, the last giant sequoias live on land just four times the size of Manhattan. The trees grow large through centuries of quick growth, sustained with thousands of gallons of water each day from snows melting high in the Sierras. The dense bark holds a great volume of water, which also protects the trees from fires.

Redwoods are named for their reddish-brown bark and heartwood, Chemicals in the trees fortify it with a remarkable resistance to disease and insects.  They are in the family of conifers – along with the devalued Spruce and Hemlock – pre-historic trees that existed when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, when climate was warmer. Ice ages reduced remaining redwood species to just three small groups.

John Muir, the great naturalist said “There is something wonderfully attractive in this king tree, even when beheld from afar, that draws us to it with indescribable enthusiasm; its superior height and massive smoothly rounded outlines proclaiming its character in any company; and when one of the oldest attains full stature on some commanding ridge it seems the very god of the woods.” In New York City, Redwood is the choice of high budget coops for rooftop watertanks, as apt a use for the towering Sequoia as one can find.

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