Also standing in sawdust is Jessica Van Arsdale who, together with Herbst, helms San Diego Urban Timber, their company which creates high quality furniture and other household items from locally sourced trees. Instead of going to the landfill, these large, weathered logs will be crafted into chairs, benches, tables, and other household items.

All the logs are from eucalyptus, sycamore, pepper trees, Torrey pines, and other trees that have been felled in and around San Diego. Herbst is even familiar with exactly where many of the trees came from.  “This is a UCSD tree right here,” he says.

Jessica Van Arsdale in work shop surrounded by salvaged wood

Other towns and cities such as Seattle, Washington; Detroit, Michigan; and Eugene, Oregon have seen the advantages of harvesting trees from their urban and suburban areas. San Diego Urban Timber is one of one only two woodworking companies that use locally harvested trees. At first, Herbst found trees by getting to know local arborists and checking on Craigslist. Now, a lot of their contacts will let him and Van Arsdale know when a tree is coming down.

Like their loose-knit supply chain, all of San Diego Urban Timber’s customers find them informally by word of mouth. Many customers have seen their handcrafted items at the Design in Wood exhibition at the San Diego County Fair, where San Diego Urban Timber won a blue ribbon last year. The entire store of Gracie James in La Jolla was created and installed by them. And they also recently completed a public art installation for the Stuart Collection at UCSD in collaboration with composer John Luther Adams.


“We mill the wood as soon as possible,” says Herbst. After that, patience is the rule. Before the wood can be used, it dries in the open air for a year. It is then kilned for an additional three weeks. This drying process is routine for all timber— it strengthens the wood and eliminates shrinkage once it is put to use.

Patience is also the rule before the trees are cut down, particularly for eucalyptus. The Australian trees were first brought to Southern California to provide a local source of wood. The trees were harvested after 20 years with paltry results, cracking and easily twisting. They thenceforth undeservedly gained the reputation as a “trash tree,” unusable except for firewood or mulching. “They’re not mature at 20 years,” Herbst says. “They need to grow for 50 or 60 years before they’re harvested. In Australia, where they let them grow, they’ll use them for railroad ties, then use them for something else after that. If you let the wood mature, it’ll last for eons.”

Herbst explains that almost any type of wood can be used for any interior purpose; a coffee table can be made of eucalyptus, sycamore, or Torrey pine. San Diego Urban Timber uses almost all the wood they harvest, with about 15 percent going to other local woodworkers and furniture makers.

Trained as a painter and sculptor, Herbst has a degree in fine arts from UCLA and had been on a full scholarship at UCSD graduate school. “But I knew within a month that the program and I weren’t meant for each other,” he says. He left the program and worked for a year helping his uncle remodel his house. “While I was working for him, we focused on using reclaimed wood.”

Years later, Herbst was driving down the interstate when he saw Caltrans clear-cutting everything along the roadway, with huge trees splayed out in every direction. When he stopped and asked about the fate of the logs, the workers told him that they were headed for the landfill. Something clicked that moment for him. “I’ve always been interested in using material that other people don’t value,” he says.

Everything is Custom Built

It is usually through email that prospective customers contact San Diego Urban Timber. After pricing, folks come by the shop to discuss design options. Herbst says, “Through this process we try to help form the concept. We guide people through relevant options. Sometimes too many choices can be overwhelming.” Van Arsdale emphasizes that the customer is king. “We are super open to dialogue,” she says. “We put on other people’s lives and build from that perspective. Not everybody is interested in the fact that our wood is local. Many of our customers just want quality.”

Some customers call about a tree that has been felled in their front yard or back lot and ask that it be made into a table or other piece of furniture. For others, having a table or chair made at San Diego Urban Timber is one of their first signs of success. “We have people come to us. They have gone to school, gotten the job, and now we make them their first piece of adult furniture,” says Van Arsdale.

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