SLB-Funded NYC Mass Timber Studio Expands With Landmark Projects
Building on the success of its first round of projects in 2024, the NYC Mass Timber Studio announced a second cohort of selected projects this month to help catalyze deployment of wood construction throughout New York City. The New York City Economic Development Corporation’s program, funded with the support of the SLB and USDA Forest Service, is part of the SLB’s growing Accelerator Cities initiative intended to drive innovation in wood construction with a focus on affordability and housing access.
Projects selected in NYC Mass Timber Studio’s second round are:
New York Climate Exchange, the largest mass timber commercial project in New York City, totaling more than 140,000 square feet.
Stapleton B4/B5 Residential,announced in May, projected to be the largest mass timber residential development in New York City with approximately 500 units, both affordable and market rate.
Soundview Recreation Center, a new 45,000-square-foot recreation center in the Bronx with mass timber structural elements.
Ganeinu Academy, a 20,000-square-foot addition to an existing school in Fresh Meadows, Queens.
Shirley Chisholm Pavilion, a 1,200-square-foot open-air pavilion in Prospect Park.
Dockbuilders Pier, a 3,100-square-foot building to support Staten Island Ferry operations.
5 Timber Houses, a series of five 4-story houses, totaling 20,000 square feet, in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
After supporting successful accelerator programs in Boston, Georgia, and New York City, the SLB is now exploring collaborations with cities in Arizona, California, Colorado, Pennsylvania, Oregon, and Texas. By positioning wood structural systems as a key solution for sustainable, scalable, and affordable development across the United States, these programs lay the groundwork for broader adoption of wood construction in key markets, helping to drive demand for lumber and grow market share in multifamily and nonresidential construction.
Industry Leaders Highlight How the SLB Unites Manufacturers of All Sizes
The coming years are pivotal to the lumber industry’s efforts to increase market share and grow demand. While the industry has made major strides in codes and standards and in the market share for wood construction, continued growth is not guaranteed. Without sustained investment, hard-won progress could stall—or even slip away.
To underscore the importance of collective action, we’ll be highlighting leaders in the industry, SLB programs, and SLB partners to illustrate how and why the softwood lumber industry is working together to grow market share. This month, current and former SLB Directors Trey Hankins, CFO of Hankins, Inc., and J.D. Hankins, Co-Owner, highlight how the SLB unites manufacturers of all sizes and from each region.
“The SLB is set up really well to increase lumber demand because when we’re fighting against competing materials, you have to cast the widest net possible,” Trey Hankins said. “And the SLB is the organization that does that with all the organizations that it’s supporting, including Think Wood, WoodWorks, the AWC, and Education. It is able to fight for all sawmills regardless of location and size, and that’s the kind of breadth that we need to be able to compete effectively.”
Expect more insights from industry leaders and partners as we continue to spotlight what we’re doing to win and keep market share.
WoodWorks Supports Growth in Student Housing Projects
Student housing is one of the brighter lights in the 2025 construction forecast, with groups such as ULI and Dodge predicting a stronger year for the segment than for other submarkets. Whether teams are interested in the economy of light-frame wood, the biophilic potential of mass timber, or a combination, student housing offers significant opportunities for wood. Examples of supported projects and topics in Q2 include:
Light-frame fire design assistance for the architect of a 350,000-square-foot 5-over-1 project in Utah.
Light-frame structural design assistance for the architect of a 359,000-square-foot 5-over-1 building in Arkansas.
A hybrid light-frame/mass timber design solution for a 330,000-square-foot 5-over-2 project in Texas facing a sloped site with a high-rise height limitation.
Mass timber acoustics and fire design support for an architect designing a 200,000-square-foot project with CLT and glulam in Colorado.
Code insights and assistance developing a mass timber-friendly massing scheme for several midrise and high-rise residential towers on a university master plan in California.
If the trend continues, 2025 could be a record year for new projects in this category, with WoodWorks potentially achieving 34 new projects representing 6 million square feet of new construction. Year to date, WoodWorks has converted 190 projects: 64% light-frame, 25% light-frame/mass timber hybrids, and 11% mass timber.
WoodWorks also leveraged student housing as a means for peer-to-peer knowledge sharing, using its speaking opportunity at the ULI Spring Meeting for a presentation by the developer of a 285-unit, 286,000-square-foot student housing project at the Colorado School of Mines. Capstone Development showed 200 developer attendees how a hybrid light-frame/mass timber structural solution can help student or multifamily housing projects with small units pencil out.Learn more about this project and its team on the WoodWorks Innovation Network.
Think Wood Drives Specification Through Storytelling
In Q2, Think Wood added 3,191 highly engaged architects, engineers, developers, and contractors to its audience—bringing the total of highly engaged professionals to 56,462. This growth was built on compelling storytelling and case studies in building segments that also represent opportunities for incremental lumber demand growth:
Multifamily housing, both market rate and affordable (+1.2 BBF annual demand potential).
Education (+203 MM BF demand potential).
Commercial office (+299 MM BF demand potential).
The most engaging Q2 content remained project profiles. The two most popular stories were Africatown Plaza, an innovative light-frame affordable housing complex in Seattle, and Frame 122, one of the first mass timber multifamily buildings in New York City, with the developer planning more. Such case studies provide proof of how wood systems can be used in commercial-scale projects of all sizes, which is one of the reasons that higher engagement with Think Wood content leads to more wood use.
The increase in wood use among more-engaged users was confirmed by the results of this year’s Intent to Specify Survey, which asked users how interaction with Think Wood resources influenced their plans for wood specification. This year, 72% of highly engaged users (+11% from last year) said that interaction with Think Wood increased their likelihood of specifying. Design industry professionals that engage with more Think Wood content are more likely to specify wood, and Think Wood’s content continues to create more opportunities for deeper engagement.
A recently introduced ISO standard series (ISO 13391) sets global guidance on greenhouse gas dynamics for wood and wood-based products. The standards could shape how the wood products sector measures and reports on wood product carbon. ISO 13391 covers value chain emissions, contribution to the harvested wood products pool, forest carbon balance, and potential displacement effects. The standard offers a potential alternative to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol for organizational reporting, making it a critical standard for the lumber industry.
The AWC formed and led the U.S. Technical Advisory Group (TAG) to ensure that U.S. wood products had a seat at the table during the standards’ development. Throughout the process, the AWC continued to lead the U.S. TAG through in-person and virtual meetings, consistently communicating the sustainability of U.S. forestry practices and wood products’ carbon benefits. An important win for ISO 13391 is that the standard accurately represents carbon flows for wood products and recognizes stored biogenic carbon, giving wood product manufacturers an opportunity to demonstrate their products’ carbon benefits.
In June, the AWC’s Sustainability Committee convened a meeting in Denver to work with member companies to understand how this new standard series can be used. While ISO 13391 is still a new standard, the AWC is staying engaged and continuing to support its members as they navigate implementation and consider how this standard series can affect the industry’s organizational reporting and other potential uses.
The SLB and Clemson Empower Faculty to Bring Timber Into the Classroom
To expand wood’s presence in civil engineering programs, the SLB and the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities partnered with Clemson University to host a two-and-a-half-day Timber Design Faculty Development Workshop in June. The workshop brought together 26 early-career faculty from 24 universities across 17 states, selected from 53 qualified applicants—underscoring a strong and growing demand for wood-focused teaching expertise.
Hosted by Clemson’s Glenn Department of Civil Engineering and the Wood Utilization + Design Institute (WU+D), the workshop paired classroom instruction with field immersion, offering turnkey teaching materials and real-world context to support new timber design courses. Led by nationally recognized instructors, the sessions emphasized the full value chain—from sustainable forestry to glulam fabrication—while equipping faculty to align courses with the National Design Specification and the 2024 IBC.
“The workshop gave me everything I need to offer this course confidently at my institution,” said Bruno Guidio, Assistant Professor at the Catholic University of America. Participants left with syllabi, project briefs, and exam templates, as well as a network of peers and wood experts for future collaboration. The program addressed not only what to teach, but also how to teach wood effectively—helping build faculty capacity for the next wave of sustainable structural innovation.
“Advancing wood design education ensures the architects and engineers entering the workforce are confident designing buildings with wood,” says Pete Madden, President and CEO of the U.S. Endowment. “The steel and concrete industries are at the table, trying to capture additional market share. It’s critical that the wood products industry is investing in education to ensure a level playing field.”
By investing in faculty development, the SLB is strengthening the pipeline of engineers prepared to design with light-frame and mass timber—ensuring wood is not only specified more often, but also specified with expertise and confidence.
WoodWorks Helps Developer Soar From 14 to 31 Stories
Each month, the SLB features a new wood project resulting from the programs it funds. This month highlights WoodWorks support for a building projected to the tallest mass timber hybrid tower in the United States.
After helping developer Nate Helbach of Neutral with his first tall timber building, the 14-story Bakers Place (which was also supported by a USDA Forest Service Wood Innovations Grant with matching funds from the SLB), WoodWorks brought its technical knowledge to bear on his next ambitious goal—Neutral 1005 N. Edison, a 31-story, 508,913-square-foot mass timber hybrid in Milwaukee.
Designed by Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture and engineered by Forefront, Neutral Edison will include 353 market-rate apartments and a wide range of amenities, including a health and wellness club, coworking space, café, and organic grocer. The structure, projected to use 3 MM BF, consists of CLT panels, glulam columns and beams, and composite beams with concrete topping slabs, as well as concrete cores and shear walls, and a six-level concrete podium.
WoodWorks staff helped with many aspects of the project throughout the design. The development and design team have also made extensive use of WoodWorks education, as well as the program’s expertise related to mass timber building insurance.
While a fully concrete structure was also considered, sustainability was a key motivator for Neutral’s use of wood. The team will pursue Passive House Certification and Living Building Challenge 4.0 Core Certification, which is focused on building sustainability and occupant well-being.
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.
Stay Connected with the Softwood Lumber Board on X and LinkedIn.
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.
SOFTWOOD LUMBER BOARD DISCLAIMER This newsletter contains links to third-party sites that are not maintained by the Softwood Lumber Board.