2018 International Forest Industries IFI Feb March 2018 Digital | Page 6
ISSUE 61
FEBRUARY / MARCH 2018
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Berkhamsted, Herts. HP4 2AF, UK Demand for wood could surge if high-rise
timber buildings become the new norm
Editorial Director
John Chadwick
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Editor
Chris Cann
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Söderhamn Eriksson (UK)
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Warsaw Agricultural University (Poland)
Mr Kim Carstensen
Director General
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Sky is the limit
T
he forces behind what is likely to be the
world’s tallest timber building have been
on a marketing campaign recently on
behalf of our industry, and we should be hugely
thankful for their efforts.
Moelven Limtre AS is constructing what it calls
‘Mjøstårnet’, an 81 m high-rise building in
Brumunddal, an hour-and-a-half northeast of
Oslo, Norway’s capital city. When completed,
it will be taller than any other wood-based
construction in the world and will defy many
conventional views on how high-rise buildings
should be engineered.
The project is the vision of Moelven Director
Rune Abrahamsen, who has a track record of
operating outside accepted norms. He believes
‘Mjøstårnet’ is simply an early example of what’s
possible for high-rise timber construction.
“With a wider building, it will be possible to
build a timber building taller than 100 m; 150
m should also be possible,” Abrahamsen said.
“Possibly even taller.”
And he isn’t the only one up to this caper.
Abrahamsen says that a number of players are
vying for the world record for the world’s tallest
timber building and has called for a proper
definition of a high-rise timber building to
ensure a level playing field.
Not surprisingly, the concept has political
support. Sverre Tiltnes, Director of the
Norway government’s vehicle for sustainable
development, Bygg21, was glowing in his
assessment of such projects, having been
willingly convinced of their structural merit.
“Unfortunately, many industry players have
previously had an unfounded fear that wood
has poor load-bearing properties and high
risks in the event of fire,” he said. “Mjøstårnet
is contributing to more people realizing that
wood is very safe with regard to fire and has a
load bearing capacity that allows for significant
heights.
“Together with [a] recently launched digital
4 International Forest Industries | FEBRUARY / MARCH 2018
guide for the use of industrial wood structures,
I believe the upcoming world record of 81 m is
just the start of a megatrend.”
There is logic behind this prediction.
If Mjøstårnet and structures to follow prove
safety and structural integrity up to, say, 200
m – which based on Abrahamsen’s assessments
is not too far away – there are few reasons to
prefer concrete and steel, while there is one
huge benefit to wood.
Governments will, of course, be champing at
the bit to provide a smooth road to construction
for these projects in order to meet growing
sustainability objectives.
“The project is an important contribution to
make the international building industry more
environmentally friendly,” Tiltnes said.
It is not difficult to draw the parallel between
wood use in construction today and the
emergence of hybrid vehicles then fully electric
vehicles in the past decade. EVs have been
heavily subsidised by governments in a bid to
promote more sustainable living in an energy
revolution that could definitely be termed a
“megatrend”. The uptake of timber in high-rise
structures could do something similar.
The impact that would have on raw material and
processed timber demand would be immense.
Even if the effect is a fraction of what
bureaucrats would like to see, Abrahamsen and
Mjøstårnet will have, at the very least, reinforced
the versatility and value of wood and its role at
the centre of the construction industry.
He deserves a pat on the back for that, if nothing
else.
Enjoy
Chris Cann