MultiPly box being lifted onto site

Cross laminated collaboration

by Ẩn danh

A unique partnership of business, academia and applied research came together to make the tulipwood cross laminated timber panels (CLT) for the American Hardwood Export Council’s (AHEC) MultiPly construction project. 

Glenalmond Timber, Construction Scotland Innovation Centre (CSIC) and Edinburgh Napier University’s Centre for Offsite Construction + Innovative Structures (COCIS) all made key contributions. They all also agreed that the project held lessons for the future of wood-based building and specifically use of hardwood in engineered timber construction.  

First in the production chain was Glenalmond. The Methven, Perthshire-based company supplies softwood from the UK, across the rest of Europe and North America and also includes glulam and joinery in its range. It’s developed a particular reputation for preservative and fire retardant softwood treatment and as originator of ULTRAjoist, a super-dried, extra-stable preservative and water-repellent treated product, billed as a market leader among solid timber joists for medium high-rise construction.   

The company was brought into the project through liaison with Peter Wilson, director of Timber Design Initiatives, who was consulted by AHEC and also recommended CSIC and COCIS’s involvement. Having worked with them previously, Glenalmond was, he maintained,  ‘more than capable of the timber preparatory processes identified’ for MultiPly

On receipt of three containers of tulipwood from the US mills, which included some ‘prime’ timber, but was mostly lower ‘2 and 3 commons’ grade, Glenalmond put it all through TH1 visual grading.  It then sawed it into two standard widths to maximise yield and ensure consistent arrangement of the material in the CLT lamellae. Next came defect cutting and finger jointing to lengths specified by project architects Waugh & Thistleton and engineers Arup, then finally planing. 

“One unusual requirement was to send small amounts of planed material daily to CSIC, partly due to the volume of CLT that could be fabricated in its press per day, partly as Arup wanted all panels laminated within 24 hours of the timber being planed,” said Glenalmond managing director Fraser Steele.  

The company had not worked extensively with tulipwood before and was impressed on several fronts. Planing revealed its extraordinary colour variation and the extremely fine finish possible,” said Steele. “Tests of the finger-jointed material in our laboratory also highlighted its strength. Some withstood over 100N/mm2, which is impressive.” 

Tight time constraints added to the challenge of the project, but, Mr Steele maintains, it was a valuable experience, with potential impacts for the wider UK timber sector. MultiPly shows we undoubtedly have the potential to manufacture engineered timber products in this country to augment – and, in certain instances, replace – the huge volumes we import,” he said. 

Next, CSIC came into the MultiPly picture due to its timber-based construction expertise and also as the only facility in the UK with an industrial scale CLT vacuum press.  The organisation launched in 2014 and last year opened the Innovation Factory, its own manufacturing facility to prototype and pilot building products and systems, with one key piece of equipment being the Swiss-made woodtec Fankhauser press.  Besides Napier, its administrative partner, it works on projects with 12 other Scottish universities, both on pure construction research and in collaboration with businesses on commercial projects.   

CSIC, said technical manager Mark Milne, works with all types of construction materials and approaches. “But clearly timber is a key focus given the availability of the resource in Scotland and that approximately 80% of new housing here is based on construction methods,” he said.  

Most Scottish home building is currently open, single sheathed and closed panel timber-frame, but more construction companies are evaluating use of solid laminate timber systems, most notably CLT.  CSIC has consequently developed its knowledge base and facilities to support them. MultiPly took that process further. 

“Until AHEC approached us, all our work had largely utilised home-grown or imported softwood,” said Mr Milne. “In fact, this has been the first time large-scale hardwood CLT panels have been made in the UK, where actually there’s no-one yet manufacturing CLT in any volume at all. Like other CLT users in this country, AHEC  had to have it manufactured for previous projects, like the tulipwood Smile installation at the 2016 London Design Festival, elsewhere in Europe.” 

CSIC’s brief was firstly to make the finger-jointed, planed lamellas from Glenalmond into panels for testing at Edinburgh Napier University, then the core 101 CLT panels, split approximately 50/50 between three-ply 60mm and five-ply 100mm  thicknesses, for the MultiPly pavilion itself, and lastly, an additional nine panels, 4 of which were fabricated using ultra-durable, moisture resistant thermally-modified tulipwood. These were for fabricating stages and modular venues for a day of special events on Exhibition Road, organised as part of the London Design Festival, throughout which MultiPly itself will feature as an installation in the V&A Museum.  

Given tulipwood’s hardness and lower porosity compared to softwood, CS-IC liaised closely with Henkel, manufacturer of the Purbond PUR adhesive used on the panels. 

“They advised us to apply the adhesive at 170gm/m2, compared to the 130-150gm/m2 typically used for softwood CLT, and to double press time to five hours,” said Mr Milne.  “They also recommended that all glued surfaces be treated with a primer solution designed for use with PUR. This opened up the timber for the adhesive and the wetting involved also helped as the tulipwood came to us at 8%/9% moisture content, the lower limit for using PUR. It was all a valuable learning process and gives us the basis for further research into use of hardwood in engineered timber.” 

To ensure consistency and validate the glueing approach, he added, CSIC also sent factory production control samples to Henkel for delamination testing. They passed. While CSIC’s press can make panels up to 13.5mx3.5mx400mm, those for MultiPly were all 2.7mx2.7m due to the modular design of the building.  Among key outcomes of the project for the Centre were its demonstration of the superior stiffness and strength to weight of tulipwood, which lend it naturally to CLT production.  

“The high profile of MultiPly, on display in such a prestige venue as the V&A, could also add to momentum for the start of commercial CLT manufacture in the UK,” said Mr Milne. “We believe it can only be a matter of time.” Professor Robert Hairstans, head of COCIS, agrees that MultiPly could open up new horizons for CLT, and not just in the UK. 

The role of COCIS in the project was to undertake exhaustive performance testing of the timber and finished panels.  Like CSIC, it works across all types of building materials, but given the nature of the industry in Scotland, timber-based building, notably allied with offsite and modern methods of construction, is similarly a core research field.   

“On MultiPly we initially worked with Glenalmond on characterising the raw material to ensure it was fit for purpose,” said Professor Hairstans. “We then ran further tests after defect cutting and finger jointing. We were aware of the use of tulipwood CLT in AHEC’s The Smile and in the new Maggie’s Centre in Oldham, but there were still unknowns, particularly about the finger jointing process. However, the joints performed well and, together with the defect cutting, produced very clean, clear panels.” 

The aesthetics of the tulipwood panels, he agreed with Mr Milne, should catch the eye of designers and architects. “You’d want to keep as much as possible on show,” he said. “It would be criminal to cover it up with plasterboard!” 

The next step for the COCIS was evaluation of the finished panels in line with European standards to allow design conformity with EuroCode 5. This involves shear testing and assessment of mechanical performance flat-wise for flooring panels, and edgewise for those standing vertically and spanning openings.  At the time of going to press, some tests were still ongoing. However Professor Hairstans didn’t ‘envisage failure’. 

Once complete, COCIS will publish its findings from the project. “From Edinburgh Napier’s perspective we want our work to have impact and in this instance that would ultimately mean uptake of tulipwood in CLT manufacture,” said Professor Hairstans. “Our core theme will be the possibilities for integrating tulipwood into CLT production and the nature of the end product; one with a high strength to weight ratio and pleasing aesthetics, so with good engineering and architectural credentials. We’ll also expand on the material’s mechanical properties and what it could achieve in different building typologies.” 

Edinburgh Napier sees potential too for sharing its work on MultiPly with partner universities in the US, where CLT production is becoming increasingly established and where it sees ‘real scope for uptake of tulipwood’. 

Professor Hairstans additionally maintained that tulipwood CLT’s technical merits and carbon and wider sustainability credentials can tie it into the drive to improve construction’s green credentials and  ‘industrialise the way we deliver the built environment’, including through offsite and modular construction.  

He and Mr Milne also highlighted that they got Edinburgh Napier Built Environment Exchange (beX) students involved in MultiPly materials testing and panel manufacture. It was partly that they needed ‘all hands on deck to get the work done’. But it was also seen as valuable to involve future construction market shapers in an area of such innovation and development potential. 

CLTcollaboration_carousel_image2
CLT panels being clamped after laminating stage

Most Scottish home building is currently open, single sheathed and closed panel timber-frame, but more construction companies are evaluating use of solid laminate timber systems, most notably CLT.  CSIC has consequently developed its knowledge base and facilities to support them. MultiPly took that process further. 

“Until AHEC approached us, all our work had largely utilised home-grown or imported softwood,” said Mr Milne. “In fact, this has been the first time large-scale hardwood CLT panels have been made in the UK, where actually there’s no-one yet manufacturing CLT in any volume at all. Like other CLT users in this country, AHEC  had to have it manufactured for previous projects, like the tulipwood Smile installation at the 2016 London Design Festival, elsewhere in Europe.” 

CSIC’s brief was firstly to make the finger-jointed, planed lamellas from Glenalmond into panels for testing at Edinburgh Napier University, then the core 101 CLT panels, split approximately 50/50 between three-ply 60mm and five-ply 100mm  thicknesses, for the MultiPly pavilion itself, and lastly, an additional nine panels, 4 of which were fabricated using ultra-durable, moisture resistant thermally-modified tulipwood. These were for fabricating stages and modular venues for a day of special events on Exhibition Road, organised as part of the London Design Festival, throughout which MultiPly itself will feature as an installation in the V&A Museum.  

Given tulipwood’s hardness and lower porosity compared to softwood, CS-IC liaised closely with Henkel, manufacturer of the Purbond PUR adhesive used on the panels. 

“They advised us to apply the adhesive at 170gm/m2, compared to the 130-150gm/m2 typically used for softwood CLT, and to double press time to five hours,” said Mr Milne.  “They also recommended that all glued surfaces be treated with a primer solution designed for use with PUR. This opened up the timber for the adhesive and the wetting involved also helped as the tulipwood came to us at 8%/9% moisture content, the lower limit for using PUR. It was all a valuable learning process and gives us the basis for further research into use of hardwood in engineered timber.” 

To ensure consistency and validate the gluing approach, he added, CSIC also sent factory production control samples to Henkel for delamination testing. They passed. While CSIC’s press can make panels up to 13.5mx3.5mx400mm, those for MultiPly were all 2.7mx2.7m due to the modular design of the building.  Among key outcomes of the project for the Centre were its demonstration of the superior stiffness and strength to weight of tulipwood, which lend it naturally to CLT production.  

“The high profile of MultiPly, on display in such a prestige venue as the V&A, could also add to momentum for the start of commercial CLT manufacture in the UK,” said Mr Milne. “We believe it can only be a matter of time.” Professor Robert Hairstans, head of COCIS, agrees that MultiPly could open up new horizons for CLT, and not just in the UK. 

The role of COCIS in the project was to undertake exhaustive performance testing of the timber and finished panels.  Like CSIC, it works across all types of building materials, but given the nature of the industry in Scotland, timber-based building, notably allied with offsite and modern methods of construction, is similarly a core research field.   

“On MultiPly we initially worked with Glenalmond on characterising the raw material to ensure it was fit for purpose,” said Professor Hairstans. “We then ran further tests after defect cutting and finger jointing. We were aware of the use of tulipwood CLT in AHEC’s The Smile and in the new Maggie’s Centre in Oldham, but there were still unknowns, particularly about the finger jointing process. However, the joints performed well and, together with the defect cutting, produced very clean, clear panels.” 

CLTcollaboration_carousel_image3
Tulipwood panels in the gluing process

The aesthetics of the tulipwood panels, he agreed with Mr Milne, should catch the eye of designers and architects. “You’d want to keep as much as possible on show,” he said. “It would be criminal to cover it up with plasterboard!” 

The next step for the COCIS was evaluation of the finished panels in line with European standards to allow design conformity with EuroCode 5. This involves shear testing and assessment of mechanical performance flat-wise for flooring panels, and edgewise for those standing vertically and spanning openings.  At the time of going to press, some tests were still ongoing. However Professor Hairstans didn’t ‘envisage failure’. 

Once complete, COCIS will publish its findings from the project. “From Edinburgh Napier’s perspective we want our work to have impact and in this instance that would ultimately mean uptake of tulipwood in CLT manufacture,” said Professor Hairstans. “Our core theme will be the possibilities for integrating tulipwood into CLT production and the nature of the end product; one with a high strength to weight ratio and pleasing aesthetics, so with good engineering and architectural credentials. We’ll also expand on the material’s mechanical properties and what it could achieve in different building typologies.” 

Edinburgh Napier sees potential too for sharing its work on MultiPly with partner universities in the US, where CLT production is becoming increasingly established and where it sees ‘real scope for uptake of tulipwood’. 

Professor Hairstans additionally maintained that tulipwood CLT’s technical merits and carbon and wider sustainability credentials can tie it into the drive to improve construction’s green credentials and  ‘industrialise the way we deliver the built environment’, including through offsite and modular construction.  

He and Mr Milne also highlighted that they got Edinburgh Napier Built Environment Exchange (beX) students involved in MultiPly materials testing and panel manufacture. It was partly that they needed ‘all hands on deck to get the work done’. But it was also seen as valuable to involve future construction market shapers in an area of such innovation and development potential. 

CLTcollaboration_carousel_image4

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