12-19-2015, 05:17 PM
THE CASE FOR Tall Wood BUILDINGS
Author(s)/Editor(s): mgb ARCHITECTURE+DESIGN, Equilibrium Consulting, LMDG Ltd, BTY Group | Size: 8,55 MB | Format: PDF | Quality: Original preprint
Publisher: Canadian Wood Council (CWC) + Wood Enterprise Coalition (WEC) + | Year: 2012 | pages: 238
Author(s)/Editor(s): mgb ARCHITECTURE+DESIGN, Equilibrium Consulting, LMDG Ltd, BTY Group | Size: 8,55 MB | Format: PDF | Quality: Original preprint
Publisher: Canadian Wood Council (CWC) + Wood Enterprise Coalition (WEC) + | Year: 2012 | pages: 238
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This report introduces a major opportunity for systemic change in the building industry. For the last century there has been no reason to challenge steel and concrete as the essential structural materials of large buildings. Climate change now demands that we do. The work of thousands of scientists with the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has defined one of the most significant challenges of our time. How we address climate change in buildings is a cornerstone in how the world will tackle the need to reduce emissions of green house gases and indeed find ways to store those same gases that are significantly impacting the health of our planet. Just as the automobile industry, energy sector and most other industries will see innovations that challenge the conventions of the way we will live in this century, the building industry must seek innovation in the fundamental materials that we choose to build with. In a rapidly urbanizing world with an enormous demand to house and shelter billions of people in the upcoming decades we must find solutions for our urban environments that have a lighter climate impact than today’s incumbent major structural materials. This report is a major step in that direction. Indeed it introduces the first significant challenge to steel and concrete in tall buildings since their adoption more than a century ago.
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This report introduces a new way of constructing tall buildings. The Mass Timber panel approach we have developed is called FFTT. FFTT stands for Finding the Forest Through the Trees; a non technical acronym with an important story. The acronym speaks to the idea that much of the sustainable building conversation is focusing on minutia. While even the minutia contributes and is important, the big systemic change ideas are what we believe will be necessary for the built environment to tackle the scale of the climate change and housing demand challenges facing the world. FFTT is a contribution to hopefully many significant shifts in the way we approach buildings in the next decades. The goal is simply to focus on the forest but never forget the trees.
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