Welcome to new Forum Visitors
Join the forum now and benefit from discussions with thousands of other green building fans and discounts on Green Building Press publications: Apply now.
Let me know if anyone wants a quote for shingle. The team we have here are great, and you are very welcome to come and visit our roof for yourselves. I will, of course, be taking lots of photos as we go along.
why are the canadian ones 'eco nasty'? I have Canadian ones from sustainable woodlands...: Loft Shop Bit of treatment on them but not very much at all; not enough to show up on the tests of rainwater form them.
Not because of outrageous continued clear-felling over there of slow-grown primaeval forest, which is what makes such cedar even more semi-durable than plantation-grown UK/European cedar (of which there's no shortage)?
I've just caught up on this thread having been researching timber shingles sources for a while. I discovered that Ben Law - of Grand Designs Woodmans House fame - produces sweet chestnut shingles, if that helps anyone:
Yeah, no shortage of homegrown shingles and shakes of various timber, at a price, and with lingering doubts about longterm durability due to the fast growth of UK plantation sources - see also Rawnsley and Carpenter Oak. I just couldn't believe there's no mainstream European source as an alternative to the Canadians.
I am looking to use shingles on a project in the south of England (Wiltshire), anyone know of any good places reasonably locally to source good quality durable shingles. The shingles are going to be used on a lean to roof, which only has a pitch of 16.5 degrees, so I am wondering if this will be a problem with using the shingles, I have read that you dont want to use oak shakes at a low pitch like this. The roof is protected from the south westerly weather by the building, so it wont be subjected to driving rain as such.
Also what sort of cost per m2 is one looking at for a shingle produced in the UK (preferably) or Europe? I dont want any from Canada, due to the transport and destruction of virgin forests. I looking to cover 201m2 with the shingle.
Not sure if they do cedar shingles, but I can recommend Tyler hardwoods, if they haven't got what you need I am sure they will point you in the right direction. Very friendly and helpful..They are in Wilts