Industry leaders capturing timber's commercial advantages
Australian companies are moving ahead of their New Zealand counterparts in commercial building. Wood is one of the key
factors in the advantages they have gained. There is now a strong trend for new commercial buildings being built in
timber. Engineered wood is clearly giving industry leaders the edge over traditional materials in many ways.
Companies like Lendlease and Strongbuild are among the leaders in Australia, and are at the leading edge of the building
industry for both mid-rise residential construction and high-rise office buildings. First mover advantages such as speed
of construction, material savings and performance on certain sites are giving the leaders an edge over traditional
materials.
Both companies are part of an upcoming conference called “Changing Perceptions of Engineered Timber in Construction”,
running on 28 September in Rotorua. This second annual conference will draw building owners, developers, architects,
engineers, specifiers and many service and supply companies.
The keynote speaker is a senior project manager – Karla Fraser – from Urban One Builders. This leading edge company
delivered a new tall timber building – the now world-famous Brock Commons building on the University of British Columbia
(UBC) campus in Vancouver, Canada. The project was completed ahead of schedule and was officially handed over this week.
At 18 stories high, Brock Commons is now the tallest timber building in the world. However, recent project announcements
in both the UK and USA will see that record being claimed elsewhere soon.
Conference director, John Stulen of Innovatek, says, “Building on the great response from our audience of over 150
industry professionals last year, we’ve added more case studies and a focus on showing where commercial advantages are
being found.”
“We worked hard to find the right mix of speakers. With our event partners , Timber Design Society and Building
Officials Institute of New Zealand, we‘ve got a great one-day conference for building professionals to learn from,”
added Stulen.
“We’re thrilled to have Karla as our keynote speaker. Her expertise, enthusiasm and project experience will be very
valuable, especially what she gained from the Brock Commons project.”
UBC’s building requirements reflect the university’s commitment to sustainability. Wood, as a renewable material, was
chosen in part to reflect this commitment. Brock Commons was also designed to meet the Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED) Gold certification requirements.
The fire safety design of Brock Commons underwent a peer-review process involving a panel of leading fire safety
experts, scientists, authorities having jurisdiction, and firefighters. In a fire, heavy timber chars on the outside
while retaining strength on the inside, slowing combustion and allowing time to evacuate the building. Brock Commons has
been
designed to meet the one and two-hour fire ratings required for this type of building, exceeding fire and seismic
standards for a concrete or steel structure.
Rotorua was the obvious choice as host city for an international commercial building conference with it’s ‘Wood-First’
policy making it a local leader in encouraging sustainable commercial buildings. The conference is set to be part of a
wood technology week of events coming to the city in September, including the FIEA WoodTECH 2017 two-day conference and
trade expo.
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