Tag Archives: Salvage

A Rare Opportunity: Oak Panelling & Marble Fireplace Sale – Ends 30 November

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* * * SALE ENDS 30 NOVEMBER! * * *

Four complete oak panelled rooms and a fascinating array of period fireplaces from the renovation of Harewood House, a house on the edge of Windsor Great Park.

A unique and special offer

In order to create space for new stock arriving of stone chimneypieces and English and French bathroom ware, we are making these special offers. All items listed in this sale are on display at our Cotswold showrooms: please contact 0044 (0)1285 760886 or masco@mascosalvage.com.

Please find brief descriptions and prices below, with full details on our website.

The Fireplaces

Spectacular Marble Chimneypiece
Spectacular Marble Chimneypiece

Original Price: £24,000 + VAT  Now: £18,000 + VAT

 

Fine Bolection Marble Chimneypiece

Fine Bolection Marble Chimneypiece

Original Price: £4,600+ VAT  Now: £3,500+ VAT

 

Wild Rouge Antique Marble Bolection
Wild Rouge Antique Marble Bolection

Original Price: £4,200+ VAT  Now: £2,500+ VAT

 
  FMA 045 (5)
 
Regency Bianco Carrera Bolection

 

  
Verde Antico marble bolection with matching hearth

Verde Antico marble bolection with matching hearth

Original Price: £4,400+ VAT  Now: £3,500+ VAT

  

Unusual Limestone Chimneypiece Unusual Limestone Chimneypiece

Original Price: £8,500+ VAT Now: £6,000+ VAT

 

The Oak Panelling

 
Limed Oak
Carved Limed Oak Panelling

Carved Limed Oak Panelling niche

limed oak

Corner panelling

From the entrance hall

From the entrance hall

Entrance Hall with chimneypiece

Entrance Hall with chimneypiece

Original Price: £25,000+ VAT  Now: £18,000+ VAT

Dark Oak

 

 

Dark Oak in the study

Dark Oak in the study

Fine carved detail

Fine carved detail

Study wall and door

Study wall and door

Original Price: £7,000+ VAT  Now: £5,000+ VAT
 
* * * SALE ENDS 30 NOVEMBER! * * *

Jobs for boys ..and women!

sustainability

 

 

All great ideas and strategies founder  if we fail to address the green skills shortage

Currently, we have a skills deficit that threatens to strangle at birth significant environmental projects for want of a workforce. MASCo regularly declines commercial opportunities on grounds of inability to find staff to fulfill demand from the market place.

Not just another brick in the wall

Bricks and huge quantities of softwood flooring and carcassing are sent to landfill due to a lack of gangs to dismantle and salvage these valuable materials with markets waiting. Companies like MASCo are overstretched and without the staff or sub-contract capacity to cope. If a brick cleaner works hard enough they can clean 1,000 lime mortared brick per day easily. Purchased on site in their raw state , from a demolition contractor, they can be obtained for between 10p-25p each in quantities of several thousand. If the cost of pallets, cling film and modest handtools are factored in for bricks purchased for 25p each, then simple maths will dictate that 5,000 bricks cleaned and palleted will cost less than £1,500 all in. Allow a further transport cost of £500 for a crane-off artic locally delivering 5,000 bricks, that’s a cost of £2,000 plus taxes to the cleaner. If they are sold at the going rate of 85p each, or £850 per thousand delivered, the cleaner /supplier will see a net profit in the region of £2,250 for their week’s work.

Seems simple to me. Try finding a good brick cleaning gang well enough skilled and trained to do this work. Don’t even think about floorboard lifting gangs, they don’t exist away from the big cities.

Conclusion: Firstly we are wasting valuable resources and secondly we are missing a great employment opportunity.

Contact masco@mascosalvage.com for job skilling info.

DEFRA Waste Consultation

sustainability

So it was that Jonathan Essex of Bioregional and I arrived in Whitehall at the offices of DEFRA to take part in the latest consultation to discuss the EU Waste Framework Directive and the Waste Hierarchy.

Sadly, carefully worded thoughts are too dull to catch the popular imagination. Conversely, sensationalist headlines alienate the scientific community and responsible policy makers. So, taking the plunge and steering between the two extremes, someone had to call for commitment to environmental challenges and demand things change before it is too late. Let me restate that same point. Commitment has to mean confronting awkward and inconvenient truths that may involve disruption to comfortable lives and require significant altered behaviour. Al Gore may have his detractors but the title of his themed environmental crusade addresses the real issue. Will we accept the inconvenience?

Behind the scenes, in the corridors of power in dry committee rooms, argument hardly rages but quietly progresses, dealing with the great environmental issues of the day.

Before you lose the will to live I should explain.

The prevailing policy affecting waste and the construction industry is wedded to the obsession of recycling in the name of diversion from landfill. Successive government agencies have each rowed in behind the recycling posture, with Treasury subsidy following and providing reinforcement. Conveniently, this approach is easily monitored and measureable by targets, which gives Ministers the opportunity to claim tangible achievements, whilst actually failing to address the fundamental problem.

Waste is defined and modelled as a pyramid with Reuse (and the unspeakable reclamation) at the top of the narrow pinnacle presiding over the broad base of recyclates and incineration (crushing and burning demolition materials). The reality once more is that we pursue target driven objectives relentlessly endorsed by tax incentive, and gloss over the implicit deception because it is reassuring to believe we are successful as recyclers.

The deception continues in the very language we use and the way we discuss the issues. The Germans call the process of material recovery either up cycling or down cycling to expose the truth of the situation. We settle for pretending that recycling is good, whilst actually applying the lowest common denominator approach, and never truly addressing the problem that recycling destroys reusable building materials. Whilst we continue to recycle (crush and burn), we will never achieve the higher recovery of embodied carbon values which would be obtained by driving the emphasis of activity higher up the waste hierarchy.

Demolition on Olympic scale

If all this seems arcane, let me demonstrate the experience of the Olympic Park. The sustainability studies boast 90 percent recovery levels of recycled materials and go immediately into boasting the sustainability credentials of the project. Politicians and the Olympic Delivery Authority instantly congratulated themselves as successful in achieving two core buzz targets – sustainability and recycling. The reality is that traditional demolition teams have mechanically crashed (sorry, reduced) buildings to the ground, sent the concrete and bricks to an onsite crushing facility and segregated the timber and burnable elements for energy generation via incineration. The embodied carbon saving is minimal but the Government loves the headlines saying they are successful recyclers. Hardly anything is reclaimed and reused and so the self-deception goes on!

Jonathan Essex and I both made these points at last week’s consultation exercise held by DEFRA in Whitehall. The exercise could potentially redefine the waste hierarchy in favour of reclamation over recycling but DEFRA needs much more representation from the salvage industry to confirm that this is what we want, and to balance the almost 100 percent of construction stakeholders who are pushing for recycling over reuse.

Get your views off quickly to DEFRA whilst the door is open and before it can be diluted by vested interests that pursue profit before social and environmental considerations.

MASCo Twitter: Follow our thoughts and views on reuse.