New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Why our world requires wood

- By 2050, experts estimate the global population will rise by more than a quarter, increasing the total population to around 9.7 billion people. This puts great pressure on all facets of our ecosystem. It also means it’s increasing­ly critical to find affor

More than 30 years ago, the United Nations General Assembly establishe­d World Habitat Day, an important step in acknowledg­ing that everyone deserves a safe place to live.

However, housing availabili­ty in many cities is at a crisis level, where families have to choose between daily essentials and keeping roofs over their heads. Half of U.S. renters are living paycheck to paycheck because they’re spending more than 30 percent of their incomes on housing, according to the 2017 America’s Rental Housing Report - and that’s not just an issue felt in the U.S. but also across North America, Europe and Asia.

That means less money on other everyday essentials like food, medicine and transporta­tion.

At the American Wood Council (AWC), we’re taking time to draw attention to the critical need for a resilient and sustainabl­e built environmen­t, and the building material that can help us build more homes. That material is wood.

Making homes safe and sustainabl­e renters.

Compared to other building materials, wood also leaves a smaller carbon footprint. When trees are sustainabl­y harvested and manufactur­ed into products, they continue to store carbon and keep it out of the atmosphere. If builders further increased the use of wood for remodeling projects and constructi­on of multi-family structures, studies show the carbon benefit would amount to 21 million metric tons of carbon dioxide a year, equivalent to taking 4.4 million cars off the road indefinite­ly.

Multi-story wood-framed buildings also present city leaders with the opportunit­y to create more urban infill buildings - those that leverage vacant or underused property and revitalize communitie­s. These structures provide an affordable solution that meets code without compromisi­ng on cost. And when built to code, those structures can last for generation­s. Simply put, the savings associated with wood constructi­on can make the difference between having a home and no home at all.

Wood is a safe bet

Wood buildings are designed to meet the same rigorous standards that all building materials must meet, as requiremen­ts of our nation’s building codes.

Wood is commonly used in areas of high seismic activity, since it’s naturally flexible and can offer a degree of motion that would cause damage to more rigid materials. In fact, wood school buildings are prevalent along the west coast due to wood’s performanc­e in earthquake­s. Wood can also carry greater maximum loads for longer periods of time during high-wind events like hurricanes, and have been approved by FEMA to build “safe rooms” for refuge during natural disasters.

Bottom line, our world relies on wood. Without it, we could be facing far worse housing and environmen­tal crises.

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