
Google crews pulled off a massive green salvage operation at California’s Moffett Federal Airfield by rescuing tons of historic military wood from the bulldozer. Workers systematically dismantled the massive, 1,000-foot-long Hangar 3 instead of letting decades of history rot in a local dump. Building teams saved exactly 119,000 board feet of rare, old-growth Douglas fir lumber during the teardown process on June 29, 2026.
A social media post from the tech giant will be embedded right here to show the deconstruction footage. High-value salvage materials are now headed straight to various corporate tech offices located throughout California, Oregon, and Washington. Regional supply chains are getting a massive boost as these ancient structural timbers return right back to their Pacific Northwest roots.
When Hangar 3 at Moffett Federal Airfield needed to be removed, it gave us an opportunity to breathe new life into the salvageable materials from the historic WWII era structure.
Instead of sending 119,000 board feet of old-growth Douglas fir to a landfill, our teams… pic.twitter.com/rgsIZnhh2u
— News from Google (@NewsFromGoogle) June 29, 2026
Tech Giants Mimic ‘The Matrix’ Deconstruction Style
Salvage specialists recovered 178 tons of dense lumber from the World War II era facility. Heavy machinery operators avoided crushing the valuable historic timber during the delicate deconstruction phase. Architectural planners want to breathe new life into the reclaimed wood by installing it as striking visual centerpieces inside modern office spaces.
Our sources confirmed that the original wood was harvested more than eighty years ago. Landfill diversion rates skyrocketed because teams refused to waste the rare timber. Reuters reported earlier on tech company sustainability goals across the West Coast.
Giving Historic Timber A ‘Back to the Future’ Journey
Forest experts estimate that old-growth wood of this specific density is nearly impossible to find in modern commercial logging markets. Green building initiatives thrive when corporations choose adaptive reuse over buying brand-new manufacturing materials. We saw the transit manifests proving the lumber is already moving north.
Spokespeople stated that the wood represents a full-circle moment for environmental architecture. Construction crews plan to use the Douglas fir for heavy interior framing and gorgeous exposed ceiling accents. Total waste reduction ended up hitting a phenomenal milestone for the base cleanup initiative.
