Brief 

It smells like a lush pine forest in the lunch room of a new upper secondary school in Helsinki, but there’s no scented air freshener.Instead, most of the five-storey building has been constructed out of wood.

 

Insight

It smells like a lush pine forest in the lunch room of a new upper secondary school in Helsinki, but there’s no scented air freshener.Instead, most of the five-storey building has been constructed out of wood.The school won’t be completed until next year, although smooth wooden panels already line many of the interior walls.

Wood has also been used in load-bearing structures, to support the ceilings between the floors, and as cladding on the exterior.”It’s a more sustainable choice,” says Miimu Airaksinen, an engineer and vice president of development at SRV, the Finnish construction company behind the school.”But we’re also working with wood because wood is a nice material, people appreciate and like wood and the design of wood.”

The project is part of a growing trend in the Finnish building industry. Developers are increasingly swapping out more mainstream materials like concrete and steel, in favour of wood. It’s linked to the country’s ambitious efforts to achieve carbon neutrality by 2035 and become Europe’s leading circular economy.

With three-quarters of land in Finland covered by forests, wood is a readily available material here, although it does need to be strengthened for use in mid-rise and tall buildings.In Finland, where detached wooden villas and summer cottages are common, there is less public concern about fires than there might be in parts of the world that are less used to using wood as a construction material.

Nevertheless, SRV still faces questions about flammability, especially in taller buildings. There is plenty of evidence that engineered wood called CLT (cross-laminated timber) performs well in fires though, says Ms Airaksinen, since it is designed to withstand high heat levels and can be slower to collapse compared to concrete.

 

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