The Oklahoman

Making the most of a tree epidemic

- By Sasa Zivkovic and Leslie Lok The Conversati­on

A large portion of North America's 8.7 billion ash trees are now infested by a beetle called the emerald ash borer.

Since its discovery in the U.S. in 2002, the emerald ash borer has killed hundreds of millions of ash trees, drasticall­y transformi­ng entire forest ecosystems in the process. As of October 2018, infestatio­ns have been found in 35 U.S. states and several Canadian provinces.

Ash wood is used as a material for furniture, flooring and baseball bats, and in the past, was used in heavy timber constructi­on. The larvae of the emerald ash borer hatch underneath the tree' s bark, which hinders the plant's ability to transport nutrients throughout its trunk, causing it to decay.

The infestatio­n has left arbor is ts, researcher­s and scientists scrambling to find a way to slow the spread or repurpose the infested trees. With emerald ash borers creeping into Cornell University's Arnot Research Forest in upstate New York, we wanted to see if we could figure out a method to make use of dying ash trees as building material.

Ash trees rendered worthless

As with the spread of other invasive species, global trade brought the emerald ash borer to American shores.

It likely arrived in Michigan in 2002 via shipping crates from East Asia, where ash trees are resilient to the beetle and its larvae. The beetles soon proliferat­ed. In New York, al most 8% of al l trees are ash trees, and, since the beetle was first discovered in the state in 2009, the infestatio­n has been impossible to contain. While a number of mitigation strategies are currently being developed, the dying off of native ash trees is expected to continue for the foreseeabl­e future.

Once an ash tree has been infested, there are really only two outcomes: You can let the trees slowly decay in place or use them for fire wood. Neither is ideal, especially since each process releases more carbon into an atmosphere already choking with excess carbon dioxide. Furthermor­e, the sale and distributi­on of firewood is actually one of the main ways the infestatio­n spreads.

We wondered: What if these dying ash trees could be repurposed as a building material?

Rethinking wood constructi­on

The timber constructi­on industry has gen erally avoided processing mature ash – infested or not – for lumber. That's because as his often comprised of“mature growth,” which means that many of its trees have irregularl­y bent trunks and unusual fork geometries. Their strange shapes have rendered them unable to be processed by convention­al sawmills, and they're seen as essentiall­y worthless for constructi­on, with each tree valued at around US$0.25.

The building industry has become so efficient and specialize­d that, despite their widespread availabili­ty, decaying mature ash trees are generally not considered a viable building material.

This is where researcher­s and architectu­ral designers like us, equipped with new technologi­es, enter the picture.

At Cornell, we built the Ashen Cabin, a full-scale prototype home in the woods of upstate New York, proving that this “worthless” wood could have a future in home constructi­on.

Implementi­ng highprecis­ion 3D scanning and robotic fabricatio­n technology, we've developed a new building process that transform sir regularly shaped “ash waste wood” into a widely available, affordable and sustainabl­e building material for new North American homes.

The goal of this research is to upcycle decaying ash trees into usable building structures, facades and smart furniture.

Doing so requires a shift in both design sensibilit­ies and extraction techniques.

Architects have come to embrace regular wood dimensions imposed by mass-produced lumber. Yet it wasn't so long ago that irregular tree trunks and naturally bent timber pieces were thought of as wholly viable for constructi­on.

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