Justin Catanoso is no stranger to wood pellet plants, as he lives near four of them in the U.S. state of North Carolina, where biomass giant Enviva has several facilities. While that company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this year, it remains the single largest producer of wood pellets globally. This firm is one of […]
That is really cool! I didn’t know they were that far along!
The Portland (Oregon) airport recently finished remodeling their main atrium area and they used some pretty incredible engineered wood beams. I know a guy who worked on the mill that built those beams. The mill assembles plywood veneer (thin sheets about an eighth of an inch or so, usually in 4x8 foot sheets) into like 16 inch thick, 12 foot wide, however long you want pieces, and then they can basically cut out anything that isn’t a beam from this massive brick of engineered wood.
Here’s a pic
The picture doesn’t show these massive plywood beams, but if you ever fly through pdx, go check out the main atrium just past security. It’s absolutely breathtaking, and it’s mostly wood.
Wow thanks for sharing! That is beautiful!
I’ve often felt very depressed because I’ve long had the idea that the best days of architecture were behind us. That we’d never have anything beautiful (like the gothic cathedrals of Europe) again and we were doomed to a dystopian feature of steel and glass monstrosities.
This engineered wood and its potential for more natural and beautiful architecture gives me hope!