|
|
![]() This interior features Plyboo bamboo flooring and cabinets made with Plyboo panels. |
The company's backstory is interesting: According to Smith (who incidentally has a degree in Mandarin Chinese), they started in 1989 out of a simple fascination with bamboo — it didn't really have anything to do with being green. They used Paul Hawken's book, Growing a Business (predecessor of The Ecology of Commerce), to guide their venture. Initially, they imported bamboo plywood to make decorative boxes "that nobody bought" (at first). The end of the lean years really started when the flooring thing came along in 1993. Consistently introducing new product lines and innovations since then, the company has grown by 25 to 40 percent per year since... with a rousing 70 percent increase in 2007.
Unlike most bamboo flooring companies, Smith & Fong owns the facilities that produces their products, giving them quality control and R&D opportunities most of the rest of the industry doesn't have, and providing the ability to ensure safe and healthy conditions for the workers. They do not, however, own the land where the bamboo is harvested; the five-year-old poles are purchased from local stewards. (Land "ownership" in China is a tricky thing. Technically, the government owns it all — but individual people are assigned use-rights to individual tracts, which are inherited by successive generations.) The poles are harvested from natural groves by "farmers" — for want of a better word, since the bamboo isn't planted, irrigated, fertilized, or treated with pesticides — who selectively cull 20% of the age-commingled grove annually. So, every five years the natural supply has been 100% harvested without any clearcutting. The groves are admittedly a monoculture, albeit a natural monoculture.
Which brings us full circle, back to PlybooPure. Smith & Fong have been using a 0.05ppm formaldehyde adhesive for their bamboo products — low, but not low enough to achieve the "no added urea-formaldehyde" LEED threshold. Finding a different binder that is cost-effective isn't simple. Formaldehyde resins are cheap and fast; other binders tend to cost more, and are typically slower-setting, which not only retards workflows, but can require changes in machinery and processes. Worker safety is wrapped up in this as well. They've worked out the bugs on an isocyanate binder, and now have no-added-formaldehyde flooring and panel product out the door and on the ground — which is just the beginning. Plans are to convert the entire production. (Their coconut palm products have used this non-formaldehyde adhesive all along.)
For more about bamboo materials in general, see the March 2006 Environmental Building News feature, "Bamboo in Construction: Is the Grass Always Greener?"
There are no comments for this entry.
[Add Comment]Recent Comments
Trucks Without Gas... Really Michael Wentz says, “In Northampton, MA, we have Pedal People (http://www.pedalpeople.com/): "a human-powered delive...” More... LEED AP Practice Exam Tristan Korthals Altes says, “Evan, congrats! Now, without checking your study materials ... How many LEED AP test takers does it...” More... Evan Joel Verduin says, “To al reading this post... I highly DO NOT recommend taking this practice test to prepare for the LE...” More... Walking the Talk: A Realtor's LEED for Homes Platinum Gut Rehab in Washington, DC. B Weekley says, “Thank you for sharing some details about the tankless hot water heaters, I've been looking for that.” More... How the 2008 AIA/COTE Top Ten Green Projects were chosen Melissa Matlins says, “Reading your commentary on the Jury process makes us appreciate our award (for the Queens Botanical ...” More... Archives by Category
AIA Convention '08 (9) [RSS]
Authors (11) [RSS] Awards (1) [RSS] Behind the Scenes (37) [RSS] Books & Media (22) [RSS] Build Boston '07 (2) [RSS] BuildingEnergy '08 (2) [RSS] Case Studies (2) [RSS] Events (53) [RSS] Google Earth/Sketchup (2) [RSS] Greenbuild '07 (30) [RSS] Greenbuild '08 (1) [RSS] LEED (16) [RSS] Living Futures (1) [RSS] Miscellania (12) [RSS] Nature & Nurture (25) [RSS] Op-Ed (13) [RSS] Politics (7) [RSS] Product Talk (34) [RSS] Q&A (4) [RSS] Science & Tech (17) [RSS] The Industry (39) [RSS] Editorial Radar
|