Results by Google

Full Circle Furniture Giving Old Things New Life

Store Helps People Recycle Items Into Furniture

Updated: 4:43 pm CDT September 18,2007

Full Circle Furniture is exactly what the name indicates: It's a furniture store where each piece was once something else.

videoVIDEO: Watch The Report

The store is the product of a local environmental group that seeks to salvage items destined for the landfill.

Nicole Craig's computer desk used to be a door.

"Everyone's amazed," he said. "It used to be two doors; doors slated for the landfill and given new life."

She gave the desk new life herself with do-it-yourself instructions, WISC-TV reported.

"Just working through instructions, I was able to build a table out of the doors, what a great idea," she said.

Keeping those old doors out of the landfill is the next big project.

"It would have been considered garbage," said environmentalist Christi Weber. "We can make functional pieces and it also tells a story."

The story behind Craig's door, which became a desk, was that it was one of more than 200 saved from a Meriter Hospital deconstruction project downtown. Now, each door is useful in a new way.

"As tables, desks, craft carts, kitchen islands for eating at," said Weber. "We're providing alternatives to some of the furniture that is just throw-away. This is something long-lasting, durable, healthier."

Currently, Full Circle Furniture is only selling pre-made items that cost from $700 to $2,000. They plan to provide the do-it-yourself instructions to the public by the end of the month.
Links We Like
Sponsored Content
Feeling bloated or uncomfortable after eating? Try these five recipes and find out why they are so good for digestion. More Details
Find out what a sputtering economy and an increasingly difficult to crack job market means to you. More Details
Choosing less space has to do with a desire to live simpler, whether you're retiring or just want a low-maintenance lifestyle. More Details
Studies have identified several factors that increase the risk of stroke. Find out what they are here. More Details
Advertise With Us

Top Stories

The state Natural Resources Board has approved public hearings on new phosphorus limits in Wisconsin waters. More Details

prudhoered
AP Images
A subsidiary of ConocoPhillips Co. has agreed to pay $588,000 to help compensate the public for environmental harm caused by a crude oil spill that marred 21 miles of Puget Sound shoreline near Tacoma, the Washington Department of Ecology said Monday. More Details

Advertise With Us
  SURVEY
Will you participate in your state's Cash For Appliances program to upgrade to more energy-efficient appliances?