flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

A European manufacturer says its engineered wood products can store carbon for decades

Wood

A European manufacturer says its engineered wood products can store carbon for decades

Metsä Wood’s laminated veneer lumber was used to create the exterior wall panels of a 17,000-square-meter concrete plant in Germany.


By Novid Parsi, Contributing Editor | November 1, 2022
Metsa Wood Group ext
Courtesy Metsa Wood.

Metsä Wood, a Finland-based manufacturer of engineered wood products, says its sustainable, material-efficient products can store carbon for decades, helping to combat climate change. 

To build its new concrete plant of 17,000 square meters, German construction specialist Brüninghoff, which makes prefabricated wooden materials, such as laminated veneer lumber, wanted to use materials that fit its sustainability strategy. So the company chose Kerto LVL—prefabricated panels and studs made by Metsä Wood—for the plant’s exterior non-load-bearing walls. The panels were attached to load-bearing concrete frames. 

Metsä Wood’s Kerto LVL, a structural laminated veneer lumber, takes up less volume than other wood materials and also has an excellent strength-to-weight ratio. In addition to supporting the sustainability strategy, Kerto LVL led to optimized assembly times.

The Brüninghoff plant has a total of 239 wall elements with an area of around 5,000 square meters. It used a total of 242 cubic meters of Kerto LVL. The team used a carbon storage calculator to determine that the Kerto LVL stores 165.8 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (a unit based on global warming potential)—meaning that, compared to other construction materials, the wood in Metsä Wood’s product is “highly sustainable,” the company says.

“Through this construction, we are forcing structural change towards construction that supports circular economy. Change is needed as the construction sector is responsible for consuming huge quantities of resources. It is a question of optimizing construction methods, developing low-emission concepts, and increasingly backing recycling solutions,” Frank Steffens, managing director, Brüninghoff, said in a statement.

The building has already received pre-certification per the ecological, economic, and social criteria of the German Society for Sustainable Construction (DGNB).

Metsa Wood Group ext 2
Courtesy Metsa Wood.
Metsa Wood Group int
Courtesy Metsa Wood.
Metsa Wood Group int 2
Courtesy Metsa Wood.
Metsa Wood Group int 3
Courtesy Metsa Wood.

 

Related Stories

Sponsored | | Nov 20, 2015

Schooling the visitor

Exposed glulam and other engineered wood products help WSU tell its technology story

Architects | Oct 20, 2015

Four building material innovations from the Chicago Architecture Biennial

From lightweight wooden pallets to the largest lengths of CLT-slabs that can be shipped across North America

Multifamily Housing | Oct 15, 2015

Montreal apartment is world’s largest residential cross-laminated timber project

 Its 434 condo, townhouse, and rental units in three eight-story buildings are made from sustainably harvested wood turned into panels by Canadian company Nordic Wood Structures together with the Cree Nation in Chibougamau.

Multifamily Housing | Oct 7, 2015

BIG designs lush, terraced mixed-use building in Sweden

Cascading glass and wooden cubes create a form similar to Northern Ireland’s Giant’s Causeway rock formation.

Sponsored | Wood | Sep 17, 2015

Compelling conversations about wood: coastal environments

Architect Greg Mella and APA’s Karyn Beebe have a frank and far-reaching discussion about the tangibles and intangibles of using wood in corrosive environments—and beyond.

Sponsored | Multifamily Housing | Aug 25, 2015

Engineered wood helps meet booming demand for multifamily projects

Multifamily housing starts reached 358,000 in 2014, a 16 percent increase over 2013 and the highest total since 2007

Codes and Standards | Jun 18, 2015

Guides to wood construction in high wind areas updated

The guides establish prescriptive, wind-resistive structural requirements for wood-frame buildings of different sizes and shapes.

Sponsored | Airports | Jun 5, 2015

Exposed glulam framework offers quiet complement to Jackson Hole airport’s mountain backdrop

A three-phase expansion and renovation, which began in 2009, nearly doubled the size of the aviation hub; the only one located in a national park

Wood | Jun 2, 2015

Michael Green Architecture designs world's tallest wood building for Paris competition

“Just as Gustave Eiffel shattered our conception of what was possible a century and a half ago, this project can push the envelope of wood innovation with France in the forefront," said architect Michael Green of the project.  

Wood | May 21, 2015

How CLT wood construction affects project cost

SRG Partnership's Emily Dawson shares insights on the installation, availablilty, and cost of cross-laminated timber (CLT) construction, based on the firm's recent project at the Oregon Zoo.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021