Thursday, April 19, 2012

Torrefied wood pic-nic table and seats



Thursday, March 22, 2012

Why use torrefied wood for kitchen counters?

Real wood color board for kitchen counter tops
...because it's the only way to get very dark, real wood counter top WITHOUT using a stain on which food can be prepared. If you look at the color board on the right from Concept Giroux, a high-end custom kitchen counter top and butcher block manufacturer, you can see that there are two very dark color blocks on his palette; those wood grains are torrefied birch (upper left) and torrefied ash (lower right).

Finding wood grains that are dark for kitchen counter-tops is very difficult and very expensive.  What choices do hardwood kitchen counter-top manufacturers have in order to obtain very dark tops?  Ebony? Very expensive and rare exotic woods?

Torrefying wood at very high temperatures can allow you to take maple, birch, ash, or any other light colored wood and make them darker: chocolate colored, charcoal colored or even black! Without the use of stain.



Dark torrefied ash
The sample board on the left is a sample of darkly torrefied ash. We are working on a line of other medium dark and very dark wood grains and should have some more photos shortly.  Stay tuned.

Meanwhile, if you're interested in rich dark wood grains - let me know.




Monday, February 13, 2012

Bring your floor outside with torrefied wood

As a designer, torrefied wood gives you the opportunity to put the same wood grain and finish both on the inside and the outside of an given space.

Past projects have shown this by taking a torrefied wood floor in an atrium or a hallway and bringing them through the front door onto the adjoining deck and veranda. What a great way to create a unified environment.


 A recent project for an educational facility, which has not yet been realized, is doing the same.  I can't wait to see this project live.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Torrefied Wood Decks - Coming to North America

Pool Decking
I personally love decks. A beer, some barbecuing, good conversation, a good book, sunshine...  Nothing says summer like a nice deck, a pool and a barbecue.

Natural wood decks are beautiful: cedar, redwood, pine, eucalyptus, janka, jarrah, marupá, you name it. The softwood lumbers are local to our forests here in North America, and the hardwood lumbers are typically South American or Australian in origin.

Porch/Deck for Spa 
Oddly, torrefied wood decks have not been marketed extensively in North America, and therefore aren't in everyone's back yard, with the exception of many eastern Canadian back yards.
Europeans on the other hand have been using torrefied ash and pine for years for patios and decks, and I'm sure this will change in North America in the coming years as torrefied lumber is becoming much more accessible.  It's stable, pre-stained, rot-proof, and provides many different looks depending on the species of wood you choose: pine, yellow poplar, maple, ash, birch etc.

The wood grain of choice these days is the yellow poplar because of it's affordability and general knot "freeness". Unlike pine or cedar, which provides a more rustic look, the yellow poplar provides a much more modern look... with flare.

City rooftop deck
Using custom stains, your wood grain can be any colour you like. The TorrEco torrefication process is set up so that the wood gets slightly roasted, and this amplifies the natural wood grain's nuances while keeping it rather pale in comparison to a darker torrefication roast. This helps when you want a very particular look: red, grey, walnut, dark brown, light caramel, etc. And makes it easy to create the deck of your dreams.

In addition to the torrefied lumber, TorrEco offers the entire gamut of decking accessories, from an invisible fastening mechanism (Lumber-Lok) to standard and custom skirts, fences, ramps, rails, stairs, posts and lumber to build pergolas, or other outdoor furniture.




Thursday, January 19, 2012

Yellow poplar - logs to siding


Torrefied Yellow Poplar: Caramel Stain
The lion's share of Torrefaction BTM's torrefied wood for outdoor siding and terraces is yellow poplar or liriodendron tulipfera (tulip tree); a soft hardwood. In fact, it's not from the poplar family at all, it's part of the magnolia family and was simply misnamed at it's origin when European settlers came to America.

Yellow poplar is a great species to use; it grows fast, it's a strong wood, it's quite straight and there are not many branches (therefore not many knots). Deborah A. Boerner-Ein wrote a nice article on yellow poplar, praising it's virtues as a sort of forgotten or disregarded species.  For torrefied wood, the reason is simple - aesthetic beauty. Once torrefied, the wood grain patterns are actually quite stunning - as you can see in the funeral home photo. There are so many colour variations and shades within every plank that the "look" yellow poplar gives us is unique.
Yellow Poplar: At the sawmill

Why is there such variation in the yellow poplar planks?

One factor has to do with the wood - colour variations between the sapwood (what you see as a beige ring) and the heartwood (what you see as a darker centre) are great and non-uniform. This is obvious from the photos of yellow poplar logs on the left.

A second factor has to do with the torrefaction process. The torrefaction (or roasting) process amplifies the wood grain variations in all woods. Hence enhancing their appearance.

The third and final factor is in the use of stains that further enhance the colour variations. Just as some stains help us subdue the variations to provide a more uniform look, others enhance them.


Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Real Wood Siding for Homes

Real wood siding, with real wood grain finishes are really awesome.  The market in Quebec has been taken by storm over the last 5 years with this amazing process.  Torrefied wood!


It's basically oven roasted wood that has been 100% dried and re-humidified. It's durable, it's stable, it's ecological and it looks fantastic.

Tens of thousands of homes in Quebec have used the product as siding and as a decking building material. I think it's time the rest of the continent know about it.