We put out the call for you to share your creative salvage ideas, and you answered with new uses for wine barrels, church pews, old windows, shutters, shipping containers, bowling alleys and dilapidated barns. Ever resourceful, you've scoured the landfill drop-off areas, reused what could have been refuse in your remodeling jobs, gone Dumpster diving and asked neighbors for those old bricks they had lying around. Thank you to everyone for sharing your stories. Be sure to check out the original salvage Houzz call to see all of the projects and ideas; we have room to share only a portion of them here.
When putting together this kitchen, Jutta Rikola customized cabinetry from pieces found in a kitchen that was about to be demolished, and from other pieces found in a barn. A few energizing coats of bold paint and some snazzy hardware breathed new life into the cabinets in their new home. You'll hardly recognize them when you see the before shots.
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Houzz pro Jo White added big curb appeal with something she found at the county dump. She transformed a discarded iron daybed into beautiful French-inspired handrails around her cottage door.
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Houzz user lynnsmith57 scooped up an old theater "Coming Attractions" display for $5 at an auction and turned it into a one-of-a-kind mirror.
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Sometimes the history comes from the site where your home stands. Houzz user Holly and her husband had to take down a poorly constructed addition at their 1851 stone farmhouse. They were able to salvage old beams full of character from the old addition and use them in the kitchen as columns.
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Holly's husband also salvaged boards from the shoddily built addition and made a beautiful farm table out of them.
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Houzz user lindagreg created a charming hay barn from an old shipping container. (This popular trend has been dubbed "cargotecture.")
"We added windows with barn wood shutters, old horseshoes for decoration on shutters, made a fake roof out of old rusty tin and painted it red!" she says. |
"We're located in the beautiful Ozarks, and repurposing here is a way of life," foxhuntmom says. "My ceilings are old weathered wrinkle tin, and my cabinets are heart pine salvaged from a Victorian demolition. The barn and bunkhouse above are framed with telephone poles. The horse post and rail fencing is oak from salvaged barns."
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When G3 Studios Decorative Painting needed extra space for animals, it turned to an extra heated shed on the property. The problem was, there was only a shoestring budget for renovation.
"We found some barns in the area which had collapsed, and the owners gave us permission to use what we needed," says one of the team members. "We found barn wood, tin panels, farm equipment parts, doors and windows. We also scoured roadsides and garage sales, where we found more doors and windows. We used pallets and broken-down outdoor decor, which we repurposed. If it was free, we found a way to use it. We even found insulation left over from my jobsites." After completing the work the G3 group loved the building so much, they joined the dogs and now use it as office space and a painting studio. |
In this kitchen by The Bohemian Kitchen of Gozan Interiors, an old stove's cast iron door has found a new use over the stove as a backsplash accent. "The rusty old door was cleaned and oiled and surrounded by Artistic Tile and Daltile's rusty iron border," says the designer.
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JB Architects designed this striking accent wall, which is made up of old winery racks.
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Houzzers have given pieces of bygone bridges new lives too. JB Architects reused an old timber bridge in new cladding and frames.
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Houzz user Carlo M. turned sturdy teak from a bridge in Indonesia into a beautiful outdoor table and benches.
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"I salvaged all of the double-hung windows from our original porch before we put on an addition and repurposed them into dining room mirrors by brushing a coat of metallic gold paint over the original, aged base paint and replacing the glass with mirrors," says Lorre Jackson of Casart Coverings. By the way, Jackson says she has more of these windows than she has time to list on Craigslist, so let her know if you're interested in scooping any of them up.
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When Rollin Fox of Sleeping Grape Wine Cellars was able to acquire 60 white ash church pews, he thought he'd died and gone to heaven. "We estimated them to be over 85 years old; the quality of the wood in them would be difficult to equal today," he says. "They are in 12-foot sections, perfectly clear, and have no flaws — a woodworker's dream!"
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Houzz user Lea Kawabe laid her eyes on these old crates and saw a dining room table.
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Source Houzz By Becky Harris
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