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Chicago Could Soon Be the Site of an 80-Story Wooden Skyscraper

Chicago Could Soon Be the Site of an 80-Story Wooden Skyscraper

By David Kiefaber
River Beech Tower
(Perkins+Will)

Architecture firm Perkins + Will is conducting a conceptual research study for an 80-story timber tower high-rise in Chicago that’s sited on the city’s 14-acre Riverline development project (although not a planned component of the development). If built, it would be the world’s tallest wooden skyscraper.

Dubbed the River Beech Tower, the proposed skyscraper design is a collaboration with engineering studio Thornton Tomasetti and a team from the University of Cambridge in England. The current plan is for a 300-unit residential building with a central atrium and an aluminum-coated, diagonal-grid framework that maximizes timber’s natural strength.

River Beech Tower (Perkins+Will)

 

Using lumber instead of more conventional materials has a couple of major upsides. Cost is the most obvious one, but environmental factors play a role here, too. Concrete and steel production both create lots of toxin-laced gases; according to New York magazine, nearly two tons of carbon dioxide are produced from each ton of steel made.

Because trees soak up carbon dioxide, a timber tower could double as a storage locker for greenhouse gases. And the mass-produced lumber used for construction projects like this one comes from managed forests, which lessens the impact of growing demands for lumber on the ecosystem.

River Beech Tower (Perkins+Will)

 

That said, some of the wariness surrounding the idea of a wooden skyscraper is understandable. The Great Chicago Fire is just one horrific example of what could happen if all the majority of buildings in a city were made from lumber. What skeptics may not realize, though, is that construction lumber isn’t the cheap clapboard that was so popular in the 19th century; many advancements in lumber treatment have been made, and today’s mass-produced lumber maintains its structural integrity as well, and sometimes better, than other building materials during a fire.

Lumber also holds up to other natural disasters well: Back in 2009, Japanese engineers stress-tested a seven-story wooden shell building on a massive “shake table” to see how it would respond to a tremor. The building survived the test almost completely unharmed.

It’s worth mentioning that other cities are building timber towers of their own. An 18-story wooden skyscraper is currently underway in Vancouver, and Amsterdam’s 21-story Haut building is scheduled to begin construction later this year. The River Beech Tower is just a larger and more innovative take on this concept; the design has already been shortlisted for a 2016 World Architecture Festival award.

River Beech Tower (Perkins+Will)

—RealClearLife Staff

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