Wood is Good

The latest innovations in wood impacting use and global demand

Renalls Masterton using new log truck technology

By |2018-07-18T16:35:13+12:00May 11th, 2018|Wood is Good|

Masterton company Renalls is one of the local cartage companies that transports logs from the Wairarapa forests we manage. In this video, Renalls driver Keith Bennett talks about the benefits of the advanced trailer system which allows load flexibility with their multipurpose self-loading truck.

Gisborne to adopt wood-first policy

By |2018-07-18T16:37:35+12:00April 13th, 2018|Wood is Good|

The Gisborne District Council was to have formally adopted a Wood First Policy on 5 April, the second local authority in New Zealand to do so. At the Wood Processors & Manufacturers' Regional Meeting on 4 April, Gisborne Mayor Meg Foon acknowledged the lead he had taken from Rotorua Mayor Steve Chadwick, winner of NZ [...]

Workplaces, wellness and wood

By |2018-08-13T09:24:43+12:00April 2nd, 2018|Wood is Good|

Wood is the key to increasing workplace productivity according to a new research report. Workplaces, Wellness and Wood, prepared for Forest & Wood Products Australia by strategic research firm Pollinate and the University of Canberra, provides fresh evidence supporting for biophilia – the principle that exposure to nature increases human well-being. The study found the more [...]

Kiwi ingenuity makes shoes from trees

By |2018-05-15T09:53:29+12:00March 28th, 2018|Wood is Good|

Kiwi/San Fran footwear company, Allbirds shot to fame with their merino wool running shoes. They have unveiled their latest innovation, the 'Tree Collection' ­– shoes made from eucalyptus fibre. Allbirds' ethos is about sustainable material innovation. When customers told them that wool wasn't as cool as it could be in warm weather, the company set about finding alternative materials to [...]

SKAIO: Germany’s tallest timber building under construction

By |2018-04-27T15:17:44+12:00March 21st, 2018|Wood is Good|

In Heilbronn, Germany, architects Kaden + Lager are building SKAIO, currently the tallest wood building under construction in Germany at ten floors and 34 metres. It's officially hybrid construction, with stair and elevator core built of reinforced concrete. It is all then clad in aluminum. The wood parts are prefabricated using glulam and cross-laminated timber. One [...]

Kiwibuild programme an opportunity for kiwi-based companies

By |2018-04-27T15:01:19+12:00March 12th, 2018|Wood is Good|

The capacity to build more quality homes is already within New Zealand, instead of overseas, new research from PrefabNZ shows. This is good news for growers and producers of timber in New Zealand. Instead of shipping in from abroad, the PrefabNZ ‘Capacity & Capability’ report demonstrates that Kiwi-based housing manufacturing firms and construction companies can [...]

Tokyo wows with 70-storey wooden skyscraper

By |2019-10-22T15:14:23+13:00February 20th, 2018|Wood is Good|

Sumitomo Forestry in Japan is venturing into skyscrapers, as the demand for residential homes (its usual market) declines. This industry giant is proposing a 70-storey, 350m tower for Tokyo, called W350. It is a mixed-use building (commercial and residential) with wood inside and out, aiming to replace concrete - one of the world's largest carbon footprint [...]

Norway claims bragging rights to world’s highest timber building

By |2019-10-22T15:14:23+13:00January 19th, 2018|Wood is Good|

In their post Another tall timber building record seeker (18 January 2017), NZ Logger tells of plans by the Norwegians to build the world's highest timber building. The 81m high, 18-storey Mjøstårnet building, constructed entirely from timber, is going up in the north of the capital, Oslo and is scheduled to be completed at the end [...]

World’s tallest wooden office tower planned for Wellington

By |2019-10-22T15:14:23+13:00August 11th, 2017|Wood is Good|

There is great excitement across the engineering and forestry sectors as Sir Bob Jones announces plans to erect the world's tallest wooden office building in central Wellington. Jones says laminated timber is far more earthquake resilient and fire resistant than steel or reinforced concrete and is also more environmentally friendly. The new 12-storey office block on [...]

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