Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

MID-HUDSON ‘ROCKEFELLE­R ROW’

Four houses on same block in Newburgh built with wood from NYC Christmas trees

- By Michael Hill

Old Rockefelle­r Center Christmas trees never really die, they just get built into the wall frames and floor supports of affordable homes.

For the past decade, the ornament-laden trees that have been lighted with glitz, songs and dancing Rockettes have gone on to be milled into lumber used in dozens of Habitat for Humanity homes from Philadelph­ia to Pascagoula, Miss. Each tree yields a truckload of 100 or more boards, all stamped with an image of the tree and the year it was on display.

Wood from three of the Rockefelle­r trees has gone up the Hudson River to Newburgh, which has helped create an unlikely “Rockefelle­r Row” of four homes on the same block in the South Miller Street neighborho­od.

“They didn’t just cut it and throw it away. They used it in

something good. And what better than my home?” says Viridiana Perez, who was visiting her family’s soonto-be home being built with wood from last year’s 94foot Norway spruce.

Homeowner Keith Smith can’t see the unique wood from the 2015 tree in his home, but he feels it. He appreciate­s his family’s connection to the annual tree lighting extravagan­za in Manhattan.

“Pretty much everyone on TV is watching it. That makes it a part of history. That makes me proud to have a part of history in my house,” Smith says.

The 2015 tree, a 68-foot Norway spruce that came from the Ulster County town of Gardiner, was used in July 2016 to build the house in which Smith

now lives.

In addition to Newburgh, other locations that have received Rockefelle­r wood include Morris, N.J., and Bridgeport, Conn. Rehabilita­ting a home in Newburgh can cost $150,000, though the subsidized costs to buyers are based on 30 percent of their income. Habitat for Humanity makes up the difference through fundraisin­g.

Buyers also must contribute hundreds of hours of “sweat equity” by working alongside Habitat volunteers.

The Rockefelle­r Center wood is more symbolic than structural. That’s because the big Norway spruces that tower over skaters each December at Rockefelle­r Center are show trees, not work trees, with wood often too knotty to support a lot of weight. So Habitat volunteers use the special spruce strategica­lly, as they did last week in Newburgh with 14inch

sections bracing floor joists in a gutted row house.

Several doors down, it was used to help frame in an interior wall. That house is ready for a move-in by Perez, her husband and their four children. Perez is a Jehovah’s Witness and does not celebrate Christmas, but she still showed the lone piece of still-visible stamped wood above a light switch to her toddler.

“Even though I don’t celebrate Christmas, it means a lot for me because it’s still nature,” she said.

Perez hopes to move in within a few months. By then, this year’s Rockefelle­r Center tree will be milled into planks headed to a yet-to-be-determined city for Habitat for Humanity.

“After it’s all said and done with, it’s going to somebody else’s house,” Smith says. “It makes me wonder how they’ll feel about that. Will they feel how I feel?”

 ?? MICHAEL HILL — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo taken last Friday, a Habitat for Humanity constructi­on worker leaves a Newburgh house being rehabilita­ted with lumber from the 2016 Rockefelle­r Center Christmas tree.
MICHAEL HILL — ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo taken last Friday, a Habitat for Humanity constructi­on worker leaves a Newburgh house being rehabilita­ted with lumber from the 2016 Rockefelle­r Center Christmas tree.
 ?? HABITAT FOR HUMANITY (VIA AP) ?? Lumber milled from the 2010 Rockefelle­r Center Christmas tree is stacked for constructi­on on Jan. 8, 2011 in New York City, headed to a Habitat for Humanity project in Newburgh, N.Y.
HABITAT FOR HUMANITY (VIA AP) Lumber milled from the 2010 Rockefelle­r Center Christmas tree is stacked for constructi­on on Jan. 8, 2011 in New York City, headed to a Habitat for Humanity project in Newburgh, N.Y.

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