In the work he does — disassembling homes nail by nail — Fred Gurley has yet to find any treasure squirreled away behind a wall.
But he is witness to the extremes in which people live. He just got done spending months taking apart a house near Lake Minnetonka whose owner had a separate home on the estate just for the cats, he said, that was as big as the grungy two-bedroom home he is currently taking apart in Roseville.
It's roughly his 45th disassembly, but this one means a little more than most: It's the means by which Roseville and its nonprofit partner hope to get the word out that recycling a house is better than demolishing it, with all the resulting garbage that leaves behind.
"There's a hot market for even some boards like this," said Nick Swaggert, vice president of business development and operations for Minneapolis nonprofit Better Futures Minnesota.
"This is rough-cut wood from a year-1900 home, with the sawmill marks still showing and a story behind it," he said. "People are loving that these days — they want to know where their wood comes from. It's something they didn't just get at Menards."
Heading off a shabby rental
In its eagerness to keep sagging neighborhoods from tipping over, Roseville keeps an eye out for properties worth less than the land they're sitting on.
The small, aging home was a classic of its type. It sits opposite Lake McCarrons on S. McCarrons Boulevard, on a lovely, very deep lot with an zigzag outline resembling Harry Potter's forehead scar.
If the lot is idyllic, the home was in poor shape and unlikely to be saved for resale once its elderly owner left, said Jeanne Kelsey, Roseville's economic development program manager. The house could have turned into a shabby rental in a declining area the city is trying to rehab, said Roseville Economic Development Coordinator Joel Koepp.