The SLB Welcomes New Board Chair Brian Luoma and New and Returning Directors
This month Brian Luoma begins his two-year term as Board Chair, taking over from outgoing Board Chair Caroline Dauzat. He currently represents the U.S. South region on the SLB Board of Directors and has most recently served as the Second Vice Chair of the SLB’s Executive Committee and Chair of the SLB’s Programs Committee.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Thomas J. Vilsack appointed Ricky Stanley, President and CEO of Brewton, Alabama-based T.R. Miller Mill Company to serve his first term on the SLB Board of Directors, representing the U.S. South. He also reappointed three Directors to their second terms: Jim Neiman, President and CEO of Hulett, Wyoming-based Nieman Enterprises (representing the U.S. West); Tim Biewer, Owner and President of St. Clair, Michigan-based Biewer Lumber (representing the U.S. Northeast and Lake States); and Ray Ferris, President and CEO of Vancouver, British Columbia-based West Fraser (representing Canada West). The 2023 Board has 14 directors, including 10 domestic manufacturers and four importers. Members can serve up to two consecutive three-year terms.
The SLB is in the process of creating additional opportunities for a broader, more diverse mix of industry and supply chain voices to participate and serve on the Board of Directors and its committees. Changes to the rulemaking are already in process to add three alternate seats to the board, one for each of the three main producing regions: U.S. West, U.S. South, and Canada. At the November 2022 Board meeting, the Directors unanimously approved more inclusive language for the nominations process and a change to the Board structure to add a public member seat and alternate to the Board. These would be filled by members representing the architecture, engineering, construction, and/or development sectors.
Carbon Offset Program Adds New Value to Mass Timber Buildings
In a conversation with Think Wood, the leadership team of Aureus Earth explains their new carbon offset program, and how it can monetize carbon stored in a mass timber building.
Launched with a pilot program at the new mass timber Founders Hall at the University of Washington’s Foster School of Business, Aureus Earth is unlike any other carbon offset program currently on the market; it offers financial incentives to builders and developers to encourage them to use carbon-storing materials like mass timber. In this Q+A, the company leadership outlines why they believe carbon-storing incentives are as important as energy efficiency measures to combating climate change, and why mass timber is the best material with which to pilot this idea.
Monetizing the carbon storage properties of wood creates new opportunities for mass timber in the built environment—and incentivizes developers and owners to pursue using mass timber in new construction in ways that could be market-changing. Funded in part by the Binational Softwood Lumber Council, Aureus Earth’s program is one to watch to discover incremental opportunities for mass timber in the marketplace.
WoodWorks Adds New Resources to Address Insurance Barriers
With increasing reports of insurance challenges on mass timber projects, WoodWorks has created several new resources to assist project teams in navigating the insurance process. They include:
Conversations with insurers. In this three-part video series, WoodWorks talks to Patrick McBride, Head of Construction Property at Zurich Insurance, who addresses the following questions: Why are insurers now providing mass timber-specific insurance and how are those programs structured? How should insurers view mass timber relative to other structural building materials? What information should AECD teams be prepared to share with their insurers on mass timber projects?
Mass Timber Project Questionnaire for Builder’s Risk Insurance. To help facilitate the insurance process, WoodWorks created this editable document that construction, development, and design teams can complete with project-specific information to share with potential insurers.
Insurance Industry Survey. WoodWorks is also collecting feedback from the insurance industry regarding the insurability of mass timber construction, so perceived risks can be effectively addressed. Insurance professionals who complete this survey are automatically entered to win a free pass to the 2023 International Mass Timber Conference.
Providing resources to AEC professionals to help overcome hurdles, such as these resources for how to best work with and allay the concerns of potential insurers, helps remove barriers to more widespread adoption of mass timber.
State Fire Marshal Group Reverses Tall Mass Timber Opposition Following AWC Outreach
TheAmerican Wood Council’s fire service engagement initiative has made critical inroads with fire service leadership, bringing about a recent change of position on tall mass timber buildings from the National Association of State Fire Marshals (NASFM).
During the 2021 I-code development process (which ultimately allowed tall mass timber buildings in the new code) the NASFM Board issued a position statement opposing tall mass timber code proposals. Position statements like this one have been used as justification for refusing to adopt tall mass timber code provisions in states like Florida. At the most recent National Fire Protection Association Fire Marshal Forum, AWC’s Fire Service Relations Manager Ray O’Brocki presented on tall mass timber codes to the NASFM executive board. Armed with new understanding, the board voted unanimously to state that it no longer opposed tall mass timber buildings providing structures are built to the current code. This follows AWC’s success in persuading the International Association of Fire Chiefs to revise a similar opposition statement.
Reversing these statements and gaining the endorsement of these organizations removes a roadblock to tall mass timber code adoption and could encourage other municipalities to adopt the tall mass timber code provisions as well.
Previous efforts to connect with construction and building companies bore fruit when Gilbane Building Company reached out to WoodWorks for specific project support on this new data science building at the University of Pennsylvania—and what will become the first mass timber building in Philadelphia—at the proposal stage.
Several years earlier, Jason Reynolds, WoodWorks’ Senior Director, Eastern Division, was leading the creation of our Construction Management program. He knew Gilbane’s Washington, D.C. leadership, which led to a virtual education session on mass timber for multiple Gilbane offices. That led to the company’s Philadelphia office contacting WoodWorks for support in 2019, when Gilbane decided to bid for this project, which required comparative bids in mass timber and other materials.
WoodWorks’ support—in the form of regular meetings with staff—helped Gilbane win the bid, and WoodWorks continued to provide support during the design and construction phase, on topics ranging from design issues to installation plan options, potential subcontractors and suppliers, and insurance. WoodWorks also created materials that will be used internally at Gilbane to support future mass timber projects.
“[WoodWorks] provided data that helped us secure an early design-assist vendor to coordinate critical details during the design development and construction document process,” said James Gibson, Vice President Preconstruction at Gilbane. “This early involvement was critical to meeting the project’s schedule and budget.”
Can the Solution to the Housing Crisis Be Found in a Factory?
Modular construction has long been hailed as a solution to producing more affordable housing, but the reality is that most prefab housing companies over the years have had trouble realizing economies of scale. As such, modular construction’s impact on the housing market has been statistically negligible, but the possible efficiencies in construction materials consumption and cost, labor, and construction timelines remain too good to pass by—especially in an industry still struggling with supply chain issues and labor shortages. That is why big builders like PulteGroup—no strangers to economies of scale—are turning to modular off-site construction and on-site assembly to increase efficiency.
PulteGroup CEO Ryan R. Marshall told NPR’s Planet Money that he hopes to supply 70% of his company’s homes from factories in the next decade, by fabricating construction assemblies, rather than whole room modules, and shipping them to new development sites. There are hurdles in terms of regulation and scaling up production, but McKinsey estimates that modular construction could speed construction timelines for new homes by 20-50%, which would help close the gap on the available housing shortage in the U.S., as well as provide new opportunities for increased lumber consumption.
This monthly housing commentary report is a free service of Virginia Tech and is intended to help one gauge future business activity in the U.S. housing market.
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SOFTWOOD LUMBER BOARD
The Softwood Lumber Board (SLB) is an industry-funded initiative established to promote the benefits and uses of softwood lumber products in outdoor, residential, and non-residential construction. Programs and initiatives supported by the SLB focus on increasing the demand for appearance and softwood lumber products in the United States.
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