Wood is Good![]() John Miller, CEO There is a lot of buzz about green building these days. Competing rating systems and certified products of all kinds are being marketed, all with various standards and protocols for record keeping and sustainable forestry practices. If you have the time to spend, there is no shortage information to digest. But some simple facts about wood that make it an inherently responsible choice for use in construction for timber framing, floors, windows, doors, trim and more.
When we dig in, we find more involved methods for measuring environmental impact. One is called life cycle costing. This process attempts to measure and compare the environmental costs of different materials from cradle to grave. Models compare wood, steel, and concrete beginning at resource extraction, then through manufacturing, on-site construction, building occupancy, building demolition, and ultimately to the building material’s disposal, reuse, or recycling. Based on the findings one model produces the following figures.
Considering its high insulating properties, recycling and resource recovery rates, and low pollution rates in harvesting and milling, wood is shown to be the most sustainable and environmentally friendly building material of the three under review. By any measure, wood construction is fundamentally a green endeavor. |



