What Is a Lightweight Substitute for Plywood?
Plywood's Environmental Impact
To make plywood, large, flawless old-growth Douglas fir trees are cut down, spun at high rates of speed, and sliced into thin, 400-foot sheets. The trees destroyed in the process of making plywood provide habitation for the spotted owl, marbled murrelet and coho salmon. Douglas fir trees can grow to be well over 300 feet tall, and live more than 500 years, sometimes beyond 1,000 years.
Ecosheet
Developed as a solution to the construction industry's increasing demand for sustainable products, Eco-sheet both re-uses and reduces waste streams because the Ecosheet is produced from low-grade, mixed waste-plastics materials, which are notoriously hard to recycle, and therefore invariably end up in land-fills or incinerated. Further, this process allows EcoSheet panels to be recycled at the end of their useful lives, offering a complete closed-loop solution for all customers.
Uses for Ecosheet
In addition to its construction applications, Ecosheet can be used as replacement for wood in furniture such as desks and bookshelves; as well as doors. It can be printed upon and used as signage material because it is impervious to rain and humidity.