The couple have a furniture farm in Derbyshire where they are
nurturing 250 chairs, 100 lamps and 50 tables. It is their
answer to what they see as the inefficient and carbon-heavy
process of cutting down mature trees to create furniture.
"Instead of force-growing a tree for 50 years and then cutting
it down and making it into smaller and smaller bits ... the idea
is to grow the tree into the shape that you want directly. It's
a kind of zen 3D printing," said Gavin.
Part of the inspiration for the idea came when Gavin was a young
boy. He spotted an overgrown bonsai tree which looked like a
chair.
He was also born with a curved spine and as a child spent
several years wearing a metal frame to reset his back.
"The (medical) staff were just brilliant. The nurses, the
doctors, they would kind of combine kindness and competence in a
way that really, really impressed me.
"I wanted to combine care and competence and hopefully this is
what we're doing here," he added.
The 44-year-old began experimenting in 2006 when he tried to
grow chairs on two small plots of land in the Peak District,
also in central England.
But in 2012, a year after they married, Gavin and Alice set up
the company Full Grown and committed to the idea full-time.
Progress has been bumpy. One of their first attempts at a crop
ended in disaster when it was trampled by cows and eaten by
rabbits.
They have also had to discover the most effective way to shape a
tree without stunting its growth. The couple has learned to
guide shoots already heading in the right direction, rather than
forcing shoots the wrong way against their will.
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The labor and time involved in producing the organic pieces
means they do not come cheap. Chairs sell for 10,000 pounds
($12,480), lamps for 900-2,300 pounds ($1,120-2,870) and tables
for 2,500-12,500 pounds ($3,120-15,600).
The average chair takes six to nine years to grow - and another
year to dry out. The longest commission the company has is for
2030. It is a chair for a customer's retirement.
The plight of rainforests have stormed up the global agenda in
recent weeks, as fires raged in the Amazon and the Congo Basin.
"You know the damage that we do with forestry. We're only just
starting to really understand that. This is kind of the opposite
really, we use ... ancient techniques that we used in the stone
age," Gavin said.
Ancient Romans, Chinese and Japanese are known to have shaped
trees to customize their forms.
Gavin and Alice hope to be harvesting annually by 2022.
Long-term, they want to buy a farm they can use as an
experimental hub. They also want to spread their knowledge
through consultancy.
In the medium-term, Alice wants a new dining set. But it will
take at least a decade to grow.
(Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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