Bark used in the manufacturing of Bark House® brand shingles is made in an all-natural, all-solar powered plant known as the great outdoors. It takes about 40 to 60 years to grow a mature yellow poplar tree.
Yellow Poplar trees grow in a region of the Appalachians that is acknowledged by the US Forest Service as Sustainable. Certifications are available through Appalachian Hardwood Manufacturers Association. The bark HC uses is a by-product of the forest industry. No tree is cut just to harvest the bark. The tree is being cut to make plywood or furniture at mills. The bark that HC uses would have been discarded or ground into low-grade mulch but is instead reclaimed for a high-grade shingle siding. HC accepts unprocessed bark from loggers trained in sustainable land management practices. In 2009, HC will sponsor training sessions for land-owners and loggers in sustainable forestry certifications. By 2015, HC will accept bark from certified managed forests exclusively.
No water is used in the manufacturing of Bark House ® brand shingles. The majority of energy used to manufacture Bark House® shingles is human energy, wielding hand tools. The small amount of grid electricity used is off-set with renewable energy credits.
Bark House® shingles require no paint, stain, sealers or other chemical treatments. They are maintenance-free for the life-time of the shingle. This reduces expenses, environmentally caustic agents and raw material usage because the shingle lasts up to 80 years.
The small amount of waste generated at HC from the manufacturing of Bark House® shingles is all natural and biodegradable.
Because Bark House® shingles are all natural and biodegradable, that means that at the end of their lifetime, the nails can be pulled and the material ground as mulch and returned to the earth, completing a cradle-to-cradle life cycle.
Social Context: Development of the NC mountains is expanding quickly. Our population is expected to continue to surge. Building with green, indigenous, building products that are historically appropriate to the area and create more harmonious, balanced living spaces is socially responsible.
Read more in Bark House Style: Sustainable Designs from Nature.