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Elevating local spaces with sustainable wood creations
These days it seems like the impeccable craftsmanship of Raleigh Reclaimed can be spotted just about anywhere, from the sleek sycamore dining tables at Brewery Bhavana to the chic railway-inspired accents inside The Line Downtown Apartments (a custom oak flipboard cabinet to welcome residents? Genius).
The family-run furniture business has quite literally helped our city rediscover its roots by repurposing local trees into thoughtfully designed creations for a wide range of residential and commercial clients.
What started by reclaiming wood from old structures such as tobacco barns and textile mills has evolved over time to include reclaiming freshly sawn or fallen trees, especially as co-owners Billy Keck and Melody Ray learned more about what was happening to many of the large trees in our area.
“We incorporated this idea of urban salvage back in 2013,” explains the business-savvy Ray, whose background as a business litigation attorney perfectly complements Keck’s engineering experience and heart for craftsmanship. “We invested in a sawmill, as well as kilns, and began diverting trees that were otherwise going to end up in local landfills to our facility, where we would cut them and dry them and take them all the way to finished furniture.”
Today, urban salvage makes up the bulk of Raleigh Reclaimed’s projects and has cemented its reputation as a champion of local sustainable design. But beyond being environmentally friendly, urban salvage lumber also tells a story.
“I think, for us, it really is about helping folks have a tie to their sense of place or to the land,” says Ray. “We have clients who, on the residential side, will have an individual tree that came down in their yard that we’re putting back into their home.” She adds that their team “tracks every tree that comes in and follows it through its process with us,” noting doing so provides clients with a connection to a truly unique piece.
Although Raleigh Reclaimed celebrates the traditions and techniques of the past, the innovative business is very much focused on the future and showcasing the breadth of what can be made using urban salvage. “There’s so much need for it,” says Keck of their bespoke character-rich pieces. “To have a space like this where you have 50 employees building nothing but custom projects every single day… that didn’t really exist before us inside the city limits of Raleigh.”
With projects in the pipeline at North Hills, Raleigh Iron Works, Dix Park and more, it’s clear there’s no shortage of clients interested in collaborating with the design-forward duo and their team.
“Anytime you can partner with skilled, passionate, local craftspeople working with real materials, your project is better for it,” says Kane Realty Corporation Director of Design Josie Reeves, who has worked closely with Keck and Ray on several developments, including the aforementioned The Line in Smoky Hollow and One North Hills. “The contributions of Raleigh Reclaimed across our projects have added soul, story, texture and patina,” which is a critical layer in working in new construction especially, she adds.
“To me, it’s so rewarding and fun and challenging too because each one of our clients has their own vision and our job is to help them execute that,” adds Ray. “And to take this incredibly talented, curated team of people we have and help execute a client’s vision, and have that be unique every time and every space, is what’s so exciting for me.” raleighreclaimed.com
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