The Star Malaysia - Star2

An ecological alternativ­e

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WOODEN skyscraper­s are starting to appear all over the world, and new constructi­on methods are allowing wooden buildings to become taller and taller.

On the shores of Lake Mjosa in Norway stands the world’s tallest wooden building. At 85.4m, the Mjostarnet tower represents the future of building design.

Engineered wood, or solid wood products, form its main structure. Now, more and more wooden skyscraper­s – like this building, completed in 2019 – are springing up around the world.

In Sweden, Austria, Switzerlan­d, England, but also in the United States and Australia, wooden buildings are on the rise.

There are several reasons for this trend. This material appears to offer a viable ecological alternativ­e for the building industry.

More environmen­tally friendly, wood can replace concrete and steel – the most used materials in the constructi­on industry, but big emitters of carbon dioxide.

The manufactur­e of cement and concrete is responsibl­e for about 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions. According to the latest IPCC report, wood as a building material can be up to 30 times less CO2 intensive than concrete, and hundreds, even thousands, of times less than steel.

In addition, building with wood can reduce constructi­on costs and even constructi­on time.

The Stadthaus in London, a nine-storey office and residentia­l building, was built in 49 weeks – five months less than an equivalent concrete and steel building. It also saved over 300 tonnes of CO2 compared to a convention­al building.

What is solid wood?

Solid wood comes from the mass of a tree. In theory, the material does not undergo any processing or transforma­tion. But behind this term lies a multitude of forms, including cross-laminated timber (CLT), which has opened up the field of possibilit­ies in building constructi­on. CLT is engineered wood made of flat boards glued together in perpendicu­lar layers. By stacking the boards in this way, large solid-wood panels can be created to serve as floors, ceilings, walls and even entire buildings.

The technique first appeared in the 1990s in Austria, where softwood forestry is widespread. It then spread elsewhere in Europe in the 2000s. It is now beginning to be used in the United States and Canada to construct larger and taller buildings.

Skyscraper projects are springing up in major North American cities, such as in Milwaukee, where a 25-storey apartment tower called Ascent, 86m high, is expected to be completed this summer. It would surpass the record set by the Norwegian tower.

In the spotlight

In spite of these numerous ecological advantages, some are more skeptical about the constructi­on of wooden buildings, questionin­g the resources needed to produce this type of material.

Indeed, it can lead the lumber industry to undertake the largescale planting of trees selected specifical­ly to grow quickly, the journalist Jim Robbins wrote in the Yale Environmen­t magazine in 2019.

And such mass production methods can lead to constant occupancy and ecosystem depletion.

The use of wood in constructi­on would require effective forest protection and management to ensure that it does not harm the environmen­t in the long run.

According to American architect Michael Green, quoted in a Vox article, it would take about 13 minutes for 20 North American forests to collective­ly produce enough wood for a 20-storey building. – AFP Relaxnews

 ?? ?? a 25-storey apartment tower called ascent is expected to be completed this summer in Milwaukee, the united States, setting a new record for the world’s tallest wooden tower. — AFP
a 25-storey apartment tower called ascent is expected to be completed this summer in Milwaukee, the united States, setting a new record for the world’s tallest wooden tower. — AFP

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