- Project uploaded by WoodWorks Innovation Network on 02-11-2021
- Project last updated by WoodWorks on 10-22-2024
Nez Perce-Clearwater Forest Service Supervisor's Office
Kamiah, IDThe U.S. Forest Service achieved several goals by using mass timber to build their new Forest Supervisor’s office in north-central Idaho. The beautiful yet practical and economical building blends well into the small rural community while the use of mass timber showcases wood as an example of the important work the Forest Service does. In fact, the new structure was one of the agency’s first applications of CLT. Prefabricated mass timber components were installed quickly by the six-person framing team, saving a month in construction time and allowing crews to complete the building shell before winter. The post-and-beam glulam structure is topped by a CLT roof; they even used CLT to form the elevator shaft. Overall, the project demonstrated that mass timber could be used to efficiently build a beautiful, sustainable structure in a remote location with a reasonable budget.
See the WoodWorks Technical Case Study on the Nez Perce-Clearwater Forest Service Supervisor's Office.
See the WoodWorks' Nez Perce-Clearwater Office WBLCA that compares a Type V-B, two-story mass timber/light-frame wood hybrid and a functionally equivalent alternate designed in steel— in terms of embodied carbon, cost, and construction speed.
Project Details
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Year Built
2021
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Number Of Stories
2
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Bldg system
Mass Timber
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Sq. Meters
1,486
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Construction Type:
V-B
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Building Type:
Business (Office)
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Material Types:
Mass Timber
Cross-Laminated Timber (CLT)
Project Team
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Morrison-Maierle Structural, Mechanical, Electrical, ICT
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Simpson Strong-Tie Fasteners and Connectors
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SmartLam NA Timber Supplier
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Gabe French Contractor
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Aubrey Yerger Structural Engineer
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Jeffrey Downhour Architect
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Maria Chesnut Structural Engineer
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Mosaic Architecture Architect
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Quality Contractors, LLC Contractor
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RedBuilt Timber Supplier
- Project uploaded by WoodWorks Innovation Network on 02-11-2021
- Project last updated by WoodWorks on 10-22-2024