Hartford Courant

Salvage shops offer sustainabl­e history

Originalit­y and nostalgia play roles in popularity

- By Katherine Roth

Two of the hottest trends in home decor are sustainabi­lity and authentici­ty. No wonder architectu­ral salvage shops are busy.

Homeowners love features that come with a story, says Rich Ellis, publisher of Architectu­ral Salvage and Antique Lumber News.

“When you can point to your floor and say it came from an old shoe factory in Connecticu­t, for example, that’s a big attraction,” he says.

There are between 500 and 700 architectu­ral salvage businesses across the country, and business has been good, he says.

“It’s about both history and sustainabi­lity,” says Madeline Beauchamp of Olde Good Things, one of the oldest

architectu­ral salvage businesses in the country, with one shop in Los Angeles, two retail warehouses in Scranton, Pennsylvan­ia, three stores in New York City and a flagship store to open soon in Midtown Manhattan.

Lorna Aragon, home editor at Martha Stewart Living, says people are looking for quality and “want their homes to be original. And of course the whole ‘reduce, reuse, recycle’ aspect of things plays into it as well.”

While some items are sold just as found when they were salvaged from renovation sites, others have been modified for home use. There are Paris street lamps reconfigur­ed as large pendant lamps to hang above kitchen islands or in loft apartments, and window frames from historical buildings like New York City’s Domino sugar factory or Flatiron building, now fitted with mirrors to be hung on walls. Tin ceiling tiles from old New York buildings are also sometimes fitted with mirrors, or framed and hung as is, says Beauchamp.

“One customer came in for a gargoyle, to be incorporat­ed in their garden area,” she adds. Her customers tend to be designers, architects and those trying to update their homes with unique decor that has a sense of history.

Olde Good Things sells everything from vintage doorknobs to huge stained-glass panels that were once part of the American Airlines terminal at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York. There are enormous chandelier­s that once hung in a Broadway theater, and, from the old WaldorfAst­oria Hotel, dishes, fireplace mantels and the elegant doorframe of the historic hotel’s presidenti­al suite.

Stuart Grannen runs the upscale Architectu­ral Artifacts in Chicago, which deals in rare items favored by restaurant­s, bars and hotels. “These days, individual­s might have one really great centerpiec­e item and live with that,” he says. “The days when someone would come in and buy 50 doorknobs are done.”

Most of his clients, he says, are businesses looking for huge, beautiful counters, showcases, consoles or back bars.

“When I salvage things, it might be the whole facade of a theater, or a giant chandelier,” he says.

But Aragon counters that items like vintage plumbing, sinks and tubs continue to be popular.

In addition to architectu­ral elements, salvaged lumber is also a hot item in many salvage shops, sometimes transforme­d into things like dining tables, ready-made, custom-ordered or sold as is.

“The antique lumber side of things is very strong,” says Ellis, for table tops and other decor elements.

Antique bricks and paving stones are also being repurposed for, say, a decorative wall.

“Things like those wonderful old wide floorboard­s and barn siding have been popular for some time,” notes Aragon.

Ellis traces this history of architectu­ral salvage to the 1960s, and says it has been growing slowly but steadily ever since but really became mainstream in the 1990s.

While the first generation of architectu­ral salvage business owners is starting to retire and close, a new generation is stepping in, he says.

“That desire for elements with a sense of history and a great story behind them is not going away anytime soon,” says Ellis.

 ?? MICHAEL TERCHA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? An assortment of chandelier­s at Architectu­ral Artifacts in Chicago.
MICHAEL TERCHA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE An assortment of chandelier­s at Architectu­ral Artifacts in Chicago.
 ?? KATHERINE ROTH/AP ?? Vintage doorknobs are a relatively easy way to add a personal design touch to homes.
KATHERINE ROTH/AP Vintage doorknobs are a relatively easy way to add a personal design touch to homes.
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 ?? KATHERINE ROTH/AP ?? A salvaged doorframe from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel’s presidenti­al suite at Olde Good Things in New York City.
KATHERINE ROTH/AP A salvaged doorframe from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel’s presidenti­al suite at Olde Good Things in New York City.

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