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Dale and Bek's Excellent Adventure Series
A visit to BBC Steel has become an informal rite of passage for many of the garden bloggers in the Portland area and, inspired by their posts and the creative ways we were seeing them use what they found, we decided it was time to make the journey down to Canby.
When you arrive, you will see the main BBC building on one side of the street. But if you go just a few feet more down the road, you will see the remnant steel yard on the opposite side of the road with a big sign that says, “open to the public.” That’s where you want to go. Once you go through the big barn like structure, nod at the bearded fellows driving the forklifts and enter through the other side. You will find the yard filled with rows and rows of cast-off sheets of steel skeletons from laser cuttings. If you find something you like but it isn’t quite perfect for you, they can have it cut for you, but so many of these pieces are perfect as is, and isn’t that part of the joy of the search?
We wandered through, taking our time, oohing and aaahing, brainstorming over different pieces we found, musing at how could they be used. So, we took pictures and drew up a few concepts to help you all see how one company's trash can be another company's treasure.
Screening: We have seen remnant steel sheets retrofitted for screening purposes to create a beautiful effect. There are many uses for these screens: to break up fence lines, to hide bins or AC units, to break up a space into separate rooms or simply for an interesting piece of art.
Trellis: Take your screening up a level and grow something on it; and while you're at it, why not play some more with the vertical plane and make an arbor?
Water Feature: Add some water to soften the hard metal edges, maybe a glass panel and some lights, and you have a fabulous combination.
Planting Pocket: This crescent shaped container could be set against a wall to create a delightful little planting pocket for the industrial garden.
Path: The metal discs intrigued me and I feel like there ought to be other great uses for them as well but the main one I could think of is select the biggest ones and set them like flagstones in a bed of crushed gravel for a path, this could be a formal pathway like pictures above with maybe some matching edging or as more of an informal path like stepping stones.
Raised Bed: If these giant tubes could be sectioned, they would make beautiful raised beds, they could be cut at a varying height and placed thoughtfully within plantings.
The possibilities are endless but one thing is for certain, we have falling in love with the look of rustic, aged steel in the garden.
Oregon landscape business license: #6111