Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co.: Flexibility Enables Success

Share this...

Houston, TX–Some years ago, Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co., located here, began holding lunch-and-learns and other continuing education programs for architects. 

The reason: architects and designers end up driving many building decisions and related sales of wood products, said the company’s Vice President, Eric Boer. 

 “We learned that a long time ago,” he said. “By networking with the architects, they end up specifying your products or services. So we get that pull-through when a set of blueprints finally hits the job site, your products are on there.” 

Based at 9885 Tanner Road in Houston, Mason’s Mill & Lumber is part distribution yard, part manufacturer. 

“We’ve grown steadily and continually,” he said. “I think a lot of that’s due again to our efforts to constantly try new things and embrace new products and new ideas versus just doing what we’ve always done.”

Eric Boer, Vice President, Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co.

The company distributes a wide range of lumber – mostly domestic Hardwoods, as well as Hardwood decking, plywood, antique and reclaimed woods, and specialty wood products. 

It also manufactures architectural millwork and has nearly 7,000 profiles in its knife library.

First incorporated in 1990, the company now has 50 employees at its 150,000-square-foot facility and celebrates its 31st year in 2021. Boer says creativity and a diverse approach to product lines and services are what have helped the company succeed.

This residential project showcases the typical mouldings and millwork produced by Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co., located in Houston, TX.
This residential project showcases the typical mouldings and millwork produced by Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co., located in Houston, TX.
Among the key personnel at Mason’s Mill & Lumber are (from left): Sam Damiani, sales manager, Eric Boer, vice president and Mason Spellings, general manager.
Among the key personnel at Mason’s Mill & Lumber are (from left): Sam Damiani, sales manager, Eric Boer, vice president and Mason Spellings, general manager.
Pictured is Enrique Flores, mill manager at Mason’s Mill & Lumber.
Pictured is Enrique Flores, mill manager at Mason’s Mill & Lumber.

“We’ve grown steadily and continually,” he said. “I think a lot of that’s due again to our efforts to constantly try new things and embrace new products and new ideas versus just doing what we’ve always done.” 

The company keeps an inventory of about 1.2 million board feet of product on hand at any time. The company purchases 2.5 million board feet annually of all domestic Hardwoods (Alder through Walnut), 4/4 through 16/4, and imports Mahogany, Spanish Cedar, Ipe, Cumaru and Garapa decking. 

Products offered include custom moulding, flooring, stair treads, decking and radius millwork. 

Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co. buys its domestic Hardwood products directly from sawmills. The company brings in the products kiln-dried and does not operate its own kiln.

It sells much of its product rough to contractors, cabinet shops, door manufacturers and similar companies. But it also manufactures wood products into items such as mouldings, interior and exterior cladding, custom flooring, stair treads and custom decking. 

 Among the specialty products that Mason’s Mill & Lumber carries and promotes is Accoya brand wood, which is placed through a process called acetylation that makes it far more durable and stable. Mason’s Mill & Lumber also carries and promotes products by Thermory, a company that modifies wood through heat and steam to increase longevity. 

The company has also built a specialty business in reclaimed wood. 

 “We buy that from several companies that specialize in dismantling and taking down old buildings: old barns, old warehouses, old grain silos, things like that,” Boer said. “They used Oak or longleaf pine or old Cypress, 100, 150, 200 years ago to manufacture things. It’s obviously got a lot of character and a lot of history.” 

The salvage companies remove all the nails and bolts and prepare the antique wood for resale.  

  “There’s been a huge demand in the last few years for reclaimed antique White Oak timbers, beams, and lumber, which we manufacture into flooring, or mouldings or millwork.”

Married couple Michael and Anne Spellings founded the company and continue to own it to the present day. Early on, they added two key people: sourcing and sales specialist John Sorenson, as well as Eric Boer, a second-generation lumberman from a timber importing family. 

Today Sam Damiani is the sales manager. Mason Spellings, the son of the founders, is general manager. 

The company’s work with antique wood led Mason Spellings and a machinist several years ago to build a wire-brushing machine.

“So we’re taking new growth – Hardwood that’s been harvested recently – and pass it through this wire brushing machine to give it an antique-type texture,” Boer said. “We offered that service to architects, showed them how we manufacture it and get the look of antique woods for a fraction of the price. So we’ve opened some doors that way.”

Major sections of its operation include warehouse-based storage and two mills: a planing mill and a moulding mill. 

At the Geosouthern Energy Headquarters in The Woodlands, TX, Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co. supplied approximately 100,000 lineal feet of Accoya for a rain screen siding pattern.
At the Geosouthern Energy Headquarters in The Woodlands, TX, Mason’s Mill & Lumber Co. supplied approximately 100,000 lineal feet of Accoya for a rain screen siding pattern.

In recent years, Mason’s Mill & Lumber has added several new machines to the planing mill, including a planer, a sander and a ripsaw. Those new machines are manufactured by Cantek. The company uses Weinig machines in its moulding mill.

Mason’s Mill & Lumber is longtime member of the National Hardwood Lumber Association, and Boer is currently serving on the group’s board of directors, with committee roles on the organization’s Inspection Services committee and Inspector Training School committee.

Shortly before he talked with National Hardwood Magazine, he completed a call with the training school committee via the video conferencing app, Zoom, which illustrates the changes that so many companies have made during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Boer said the business didn’t shut down during the national lockdown last year after lumber sawmills were deemed essential services.

A few employees have had to work from home, the company has changed its sales area to accommodate social distancing, and only a certain amount of people are allowed in the office at a time. The company has also furnished masks, gloves and hand sanitizer to the employees, he said.

The company has also taken steps to deal with the economic slowdown. 

Boer said, “We’re like everybody. We’re not stockpiling per se, we’re running lean and we’re just being very flexible.”

Boer said he believes that the company’s willingness to try new things will help it succeed in the future, just as it has for the past 30 years.

“There’s been a series of things that came up short and we swung and missed at a few – and we’ve had a few home runs along the way as well,” he said. “Really the overall theme I guess has just been being open-minded and progressive and trying to stay out in front of new products and new services.” 

Learn more at www.masonsmillandlumber.com.

This is Mason’s Mill & Lumber’s moulding mill. The company purchases 2.5 million board feet annually of all domestic Hardwoods (Alder through Walnut), 4/4 through 16/4, and imports Mahogany, Spanish Cedar, Ipe, Cumaru and Garapa decking.
This is Mason’s Mill & Lumber’s moulding mill. The company purchases 2.5 million board feet annually of all domestic Hardwoods (Alder through Walnut), 4/4 through 16/4, and imports Mahogany, Spanish Cedar, Ipe, Cumaru and Garapa decking.

By Miller Wood Trade Publications

The premier online information source for the forest products industry since 1927.

Share This
Related Articles
National Hardwood Magazine
Miller Wood Trade Publications

Northeast trends 

Throughout the Northeast region lumber sources weren’t able to come to a consensus as to how the market was faring, with one source noting that

Read More »
National Hardwood Magazine
Miller Wood Trade Publications

West Coast Business Trends

Recently, lumber sales on the West Coast were not going gang-busters, as reflected in interviews, but in some places, there were indications of strength. For

Read More »
National Hardwood Magazine
Miller Wood Trade Publications

Ontario Trends

The winter weather was milder with less snowfall in certain areas, thus affecting logging activity levels. As well, markets have contracted, causing limited timber sales

Read More »
National Hardwood Magazine
Miller Wood Trade Publications

In Memoriam  

Surrounded by family, Wendell Cramer passed away peacefully on March 3, 2024. He was born to the late Cassian Peter Cramer and Lillian Bresnahan Cramer

Read More »
National Hardwood Magazine
Miller Wood Trade Publications

Lake States Trends 

Contacts in the Lake States region accounted for average Hardwood activity, with many stating they expect supply shortages in the coming months.  An Indiana Hardwood

Read More »