This N.B. woodworker gives pianos a new lease on life by taking them apart - Action News
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New Brunswick

This N.B. woodworker gives pianos a new lease on life by taking them apart

Walking into Jim Allisons workshop, you might wonder whether hes a woodworker or a piano repair man. It turns out he's both but he doesn't repair pianos so much as reinventthem.

Jim Allison deconstructs pianos and uses the wood inside to craft jewelry boxes, tables and harps

A man sitting in a workshop holding a wooden strumstick
Jim Allison holds a strumstick in his workshop near Florenceville-Bristol, N.B. He finds old pianos on Facebook Marketplace, takes them apart and uses the wood for his projects. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC)

Walking into Jim Allison's workshop, you might wonder whether he's a woodworker or a piano repair man.

It turns out he's both but he doesn't repair pianos so much as reinventthem.

Allison finds old pianos,often listed as free, out of tune, missing keys, and meticulously takes them apart.

He strips out the heavy iron frame, the strings, hammers, keys, and pedals and then extracts the wood inside.

A collection of wooden items on two white display pedestals.
Allison transforms the piano wood into jewelry boxes, miniature furniture, and even new musical instruments like strumsticks, harps and banjos. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC)

He then transforms that wood into jewelry boxes, miniature furniture, and even new musical instruments like strumsticks, harps and banjos.

So far, he's deconstructed 42 pianos but this summer marked his last. Allison says the pianos have yielded so much wood that this woodworking project has reached its coda.

Skipping the hardware store for Facebook Marketplace

Allison became a woodworker in earnest a decade ago after retiring from his job as an automatic transmission specialist. But he didn't considerstripping pianos for their wooduntil eight years ago.

"My next-door neighbour had [a piano] that she took out of her father's house after he died and she asked me one day if I wanted it. And I thought, 'well maybe there's some wood in it that I can use.'"

The pianos turned out to be a treasure trove of beautiful, dry, rare wood everything from "maple and birch and American chestnut, cottonwood or poplar and spruce and fir."

WATCH |James Allison tears apart old unwanted pianos and builds new things from the wood he finds inside:

Piano man trashes unwanted pianos to make beautiful things from the remains.

1 year ago
Duration 3:18
A New Brunswick woodworker has transformed more than three dozen pianos into furniture, ammunition boxes, even new musical instruments as he recycles unwanted pianos that are sometimes more than 100 years old.

"Most of [the wood] is at least a hundred years old," said Allison. "It's been in a house that's fairly dry, and it was dry before the piano was built and it does not warp or twist or anything, so it was a joy to work with."

Soon, he was finding dozens of old pianos on Facebook Marketplace, listed for free. He would either deconstruct them on the spot, or load them into his truck and take them home to work on.

Allison loves seeing the reaction of people who learn the mahogany in their homemade jewelry box came from a piano that's at least 100 years old.

A man with grey hair and glasses holds a deconstructed piano
Allison shows what's left of a piano after it's been taken apart. So far, he's deconstructed 42 pianos. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC)

"They're surprised at where it came from, because for most people wood comes from the local hardware store or the lumber yard, and almost none of mine does."

The sentimental value of an old family piano

The pianos Allison takes apart range in age from 100 to 130 years old. Some of those pianos remained in not only the same family but the same place in the home for their entire lives.

"I get stories that their grandmother had it, and their mother had it, and they've played it and their kids maybe have started to play it, so you're looking at four or five generations," he said.

A wooden jewelry box with the top propped open
One of Allison's finished jewelry boxes, made out of wood salvaged from a piano. Allison loves seeing the reaction of people who learn their homemade jewelry box is made from a century-old piano. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC)

But all too often, the family had todownsize. The kids grewup and the piano sat silent, collecting dust.

"They're such a big thing and they're heavy and it takes a minimum of four people to move them, and most people when they're done with them leave them sitting where they are in the house," said Allison.

"Nobody wants to take them apart, and the only real way to get rid of it is to find some place to burn it and pick the steel out of it."

He'd rather save the wood than see the piano burned. Still, Allison saidthere can be sadness from families who don't want to see their beloved piano taken apart and destroyed. But he saidhe always gives families something to remember it by.

Planks of wood stood in the corner of a room
Allison says the pianos have given enough wood now to last him for years. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC)

"I usually make a box out of the piano and give it back to them. I usually write on it [with] who had the piano and where it came from and the year that I got it on the bottom of the box and they're quite happy to get it."

Enough piano wood to last a lifetime

Allison says the pianos have given him plenty of wood over the years,and he's ready to move on.

"I've got enough wood in there to last me for years. Because the stuff that I build doesn't use much wood. And I just don't need anymore."

He's become so well known in the river valley area that he routinelygets offers of free pianos.

"I have to refuse a lot of them, because I've had four in here at once and it takes up a lot of room, and it's two to three days to take one apart, so I lose a week or better just taking them apart."

A wooden harp on a workbench
From one instrument to another, this harp was made out of the wood from a deconstructed piano. (Jeanne Armstrong/CBC)

Growing up, Allison said,he was surrounded by the sounds of the musical instruments piano, guitar, accordion, mouth organ that he or his siblings would play.

"I love piano music. I just can't get my hands to work to play one."

After seeing the insides of so many pianos, he can't help but picture all the mechanics the hammers, soundboard and strings when he hears piano music.

"I can see it all going."