apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Pallets as Building Material?

pallets081208.jpgEvery day I pass a local hardware store on my bike home and in the corner of their parking lot, next to the street, sits a pile of shipping pallets. The pile slowly dwindles throughout the week as people load up their vehicles with free wood, only to be restocked with fresh pallets upon the store's next delivery. Inspired by the Futon Turned Garden Gate, I was wondering what I could make out of pallets.

 
 

From complete homes, to simple fences and furniture, creative up-cyclers have turned used pallets into objects of tremendous function. Not only is it preventing the pallets from going to the landfill or turning into firewood, it prevents the use of new lumber.

I-Beam Design has created an entire home based on pallets:
pallethouse081208.jpg
Studio Mama sells pallet chairs, lights and stools:
palletchair081208.jpg
Various projects are showcased at this Web site, as pictured below:

niceshed081208.jpg
Coop081308.jpg
Have you seen any creative use of pallets? My personal hope is to create a small fence for my yard out of pallets. If you have any ideas on how to make an attractive fence out of pallets, or any other inexpensive green building material for that matter, I'd love to hear them.

Tags

recycling & donating, outdoor furniture, lumber & building supplies, Building Materials, Pallets, Recycled

Related Links

Share

Comments (10)

don't forget:

-compost bins,
-animal coop,
-garden beds

posted by callbob on August 12th 2008 at 10:37am
view callbob's profile

In Austin we have a "no leash" law which says if you have a yard and a dog, you need to have a fence, and not keep the dog on the leash while outside, unsupervised. A friend of mine, who is broke, decided to make a small fenced-in (like 12'x12') area to keep his two small dogs in. He made the fence out of pallets and metal stakes. It works well.

posted by ronzorelli on August 12th 2008 at 11:41am
view ronzorelli's profile

Apologize in advance for the embedded link to this project, Unit Load_Redux, but I've seen some good work using pallets. It's a great idea and demonstrates the ability to reuse objects in different ways going forward.

posted by Preston on August 12th 2008 at 1:47pm
view Preston's profile

If the pallets were used on overseas shipments from China than they have been treated with a pesticide (methyl bromide) and you won't want to use those.
The pesticide is used to prevent any damaging insects from killing our crops, trees and native plants.

The Asian long-horned beetle and the emerald ash borer have destroyed thousands of trees in Chicago and New York.

posted by llj71 on August 13th 2008 at 1:40pm
view llj71's profile

We got this HUGE pallet from the shipment of our Ikea cabinets. We decided we are going to use it to make a work table in the garage.

I love the idea for the chair though - which I have a smaller pallet.

posted by Robbybird on August 14th 2008 at 9:03am
view Robbybird's profile

One of the best uses for pallets is to reuse them as pallets! Here in Atlanta I see lots of guys going around to collect used pallets and taking them to a pallet recycling center. Plus, I think you get paid for each pallet you bring in.

posted by happyfamily on August 16th 2008 at 4:14am
view happyfamily's profile

please can you tell me where you can get these free pallets?

are there any in NYC?

posted by fionamiumiu on August 17th 2008 at 6:02am
view fionamiumiu's profile

My hardware store puts them out on the corner. Sometimes you'll see them laying around garbage/recycling containers.

posted by ttbj on October 9th 2008 at 4:11am
view ttbj's profile

Oh wow, that picture of pallets brings back distant memories.

Four the first 7 years of my life I grew up near the headlands to the Palouse, in eastern Washington. Otherwise known as the country, the sticks or the boondocks. We shared our property with another family who owned many horses; along with our pigs, goat, chickens, turkey and sheep these horses needed a place to roam.

Lets just say that my family had a tight budget. My papa (don't I sound like little house on the prairie!) decided to make use of the many free pallets in the back of grocery stores, hardware stores and lumber yards and make a variety of fences within our property lines.

While I'd say it wasn't the prettiest set of fences (the current owners put in a beautiful set fencing) it worked. The animals were safe and free to roam. We also had left over pallets that were stacked behind one of the large barns that I remember playing on, in and around as a child.

Needless to say. After the pallet fences were put in, our farm was known as Pallentan Acres.

(Pallets were also our only source of firewood- oak is the best- better than cutting down more trees).

posted by O Lu on October 9th 2008 at 7:35am
view O Lu's profile

I don't have the plans anymore but I once made an awsome contemporary coffee table from a used pallet. Sand, paint, then affix wooden fence finials (tops) for legs. only real expense was the glass top. No one ever guessed it was from a pallet.

posted by hippyvieja on October 10th 2008 at 6:43am
view hippyvieja's profile