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Date: | Wed, 19 Mar 2008 10:02:17 -0400 |
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gabriel Orgrease
> Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2008 9:37 AM
>
> As consultant to an architect on a project at Gramercy Park
> North desire is to replace faux Tudor wood plank installed in
> 1900's w/ new wood. I was asked to confer on IPE (a Brazilian
> ironwood?
Ipe is a Brazilian hardwood; the product we are seeing in the building
industry is farm-grown. It's good stuff in the appropriate application.
Its durability is rooted in its extremely high density and its natural
oils. It is naturally resistant to water and insect and microbe
infestation.
In addition to the workability drawbacks you note, these durability
traits also make it extremely difficult to get a finish to adhere to
Ipe. It won't absorb stain, and getting a paint film to stick is like
painting a teflon pan.
Is this tudoresque tongue and groove paneling, or tudor "beams" in a
field of stucco? In either case they would have likely been stained or
painted, and I think Ipe would be a bad choice.
Dan
_____________________________________
Dan Becker, Division Manager
City & Regional Planning Division
Raleigh Department of City Planning
919/516-2632
“E-mail correspondence to and from this address may be subject to the North Carolina Public Records Law and may be disclosed to third parties by an authorized City or Law Enforcement official.”
--
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