Do you have your copies yet of these free wood building guides?

 

A significant opportunity to reduce Canada’s and the world’s carbon footprint is through sustainable construction. FPInnovations has been putting a great deal of effort into facilitating the use of wood, a bio-sourced and renewable construction material, in taller and larger buildings, and has shared its expertise on this topic through numerous guides. With subjects ranging from designing and constructing tall wood buildings to controlling vibration in wood floors, these newest guides are invaluable resources for professionals working in the area of wood building construction.

As a bonus, you can download all of these guides for free!

Technical Guide for the Design and Construction of Tall Wood Buildings in Canada, 2nd edition

The definitive guide for the mass timber design and construction of tall buildings has been updated to align with changes to national codes and standards. It builds on 12-storey mass timber gravity systems as an Acceptable Solution in the 2020 edition of the National Building Code, and targets supporting Alternative Solutions that will enable wood to be used beyond 12 storeys.

This 2022 update replaces the first edition, which was developed to support the Natural Resources Canada Tall Wood Building Demonstration Initiative. This multi-disciplinary, peer-reviewed guide has gained national and worldwide recognition as one of the most credible documents that has introduced the terms “mass timber construction” and “hybrid tall wood buildings” to the design and construction community, and to authorities having jurisdiction.

This updated guide brings together, under one cover, the experience gained from recently built tall wood projects, highlights from the most recent building codes and standards, and research findings to help achieve the best environmental, structural, fire, and durability performance of mass timber products and systems, including their health benefits.

Get your copy at web.fpinnovations.ca/tallwood/.

Best Practices Guide for Controlling Wood Floor Vibration

Floor vibration due to walking has long been a subject of interest to designers, builders, and manufacturers. FPInnovations has been studying this subject for several decades and has worked with researchers, practitioners, manufacturers, and occupants to create a large knowledge database. The research results are now incorporated into the latest versions of the National Building Code and CSA O86:19 Engineering Design in Wood.

This guide provides an overview on walking-induced vibrations with wood-frame and CLT mass timber floors based on typical North American construction. It presents the fundamental principles of floor vibration induced by normal walking and introduces a strategy on how to control vibration. It explains in detail the effects of the parameters of wood-frame and CLT floors and introduces the CSA O86 design methods. The guide also discusses a new approach to timber-concrete-composite design and presents design examples. 

Get your copy at web.fpinnovations.ca/vibration/.

Modelling Guide for Timber Structures

Computer modelling is essential for analyzing and designing mid- and high-rise buildings and long-span structures where traditional engineering hand calculations or spreadsheets typically adopted by designers for low-rise timber buildings are not adequate. It is also a valuable tool for optimizing wood-based products, connections, and systems that improve structural performance.

This guide will help engineers apply computer modelling concepts to the design of timber constructions, enrich researchers’ resources for advanced computer modelling of timber systems, and assist software companies in identifying the gaps and upgrading programs accordingly to accommodate advanced computer modelling of timber structures.

The information in this guide complements the overview of the analysis and design of tall wood buildings in the Technical Guide for the Design and Construction of Tall Wood Buildings in Canada and the fundamental information and knowledge related to timber system modelling in the Canadian Wood Council’s Wood Design Manual.

Get your copy at web.fpinnovations.ca/modelling/.

Canadian CLT Handbook, 2nd edition

Cross-laminated timber (CLT) is increasingly used in the sustainable construction of tall buildings and has a firm footing in the mass-timber-building global movement. FPInnovations and its partners are leading the knowledge transfer of the most up-to-date CLT technical information to the design and construction communities.

FPInnovations and its partners first delivered the Canadian and U.S. versions of the handbooks in 2011 and 2013, respectively. Since then, new research and regulations made a revised comprehensive how-to handbook essential. The 2019 edition of the Canadian CLT Handbook includes the new CLT provisions in the CSA Group standard in Engineering Design in Wood. An extra chapter provides a state-of-the-art design prototype of an eight-storey mass-timber building.

Get your copy at clt.fpinnovations.ca/.

Design Guide for Timber-Concrete Composite Floors in Canada

Mass timber is increasingly being used in construction as the advantages of this material are constantly being highlighted. The many health benefits of wood have well been proven, not to mention its environmental benefits in the context of the fight against climate change.

Extensive research on the many properties of wood in construction, including through the use of CLT, has led to the development of design details to facilitate the increased and safe use of this material in various construction projects. They have also opened the door to hybrid uses aimed at a better response from innovative building systems.

As part of its research work on wood buildings, FPInnovations published a Design Guide for Timber-Concrete Composite Floors in Canada in 2020. This technique, far from being new, could prove to be a cost-competitive solution for floors with longer-span since the mechanical properties of the two materials act in complementarity.

Get your copy at web.fpinnovations.ca/tcc/.

There’s more!

In addition, you can find the following guides (and much more) in FPInnovations’ online research library:

 

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