Are Skyscrapers Made From Wood The Future Of Design?
New York magazine|December 26, 2016 - January 8, 2017

Imagine a new miracle building material that could change the way skyscrapers are designed. Now imagine that material is wood.

Justin Davidson
Are Skyscrapers Made From Wood The Future Of Design?

UNTIL RECENTLY, there were two basic ways of using wood in construction: chop down whole tree trunks for heavy beams or saw them into two-by-fours. The first, which produced log cabins and medieval church roofs, is costly and inefficient today, relying on scarce old-growth. The second gives us stick-built houses but nothing much taller than a few floors. Now a third technique, sandwiching layers of wood and adhesive, yields cross-laminated timber (CLT), a kind of super-plywood that comes in immense slabs as long as a bowling lane and as thick as 12 inches. A similar process yields steel-hard beams called glulam. The principle is almost touchingly simple: “Gluing a stack of cards together produces something stronger than building a house of cards,” says architect Do Janne Vermeulen, a principal at the Dutch firm Team V Architecture.

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