Professional Practice
Using Low-Impact Materials: Sustainable Woods
Lumber for fences and benches is FCS-certified. Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ 2015 Professional Residential Design Honor Award. Sweetwater Spectrum Residential Community for Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder, Sonoma, California / Roche + Roche Landscape Architecture.
Wood has a carbon footprint 75 percent less than common building materials, like concrete or steel, and can be a renewable, resource-efficient material in landscape design.
recommends building with certified, sustainably-harvested woods, recycled woods, and recycled plastic or composite lumber to preserve forests, which are critical to sequestering green house gas (GHG) emissions, and extend the life of useful materials. Instead of using increasingly-scarce virgin woods, particularly from tropical hardwoods, homeowners can use reclaimed wood from existing structures and avoid sending that material to the landfill. Recycled wood can be salvaged from places like old buildings and shipping materials, and restored for a variety of residential uses, including decking, seating, and fences.
There is over recycled plastic and composite lumber as a sustainable material. Composites are generally made of waste wood fibers and recycled plastics and can last over 20 years. However, these materials are difficult to dispose of because their production process binds recycled wood fibers with non-recyclable plastics, thereby merely delaying the material ending up in the landfill. Landscape architects should review the environmental product declarations and carbon footprint of wood and other materials before specifying for a site.
It is important that wood is sustainably sourced. Certified woods refer to harvested woods that originate from responsibly managed forests. These woods are certified through an independent organization that issues standards for sustainable forest management. Sustainable forest management enables lumber companies to harvest wood for materials while conserving forest ecosystems and preserving natural habitat. Sustainable forest management ensures a stable source of lumber and minimizes adverse environmental effects, such as soil erosion, stream sedimentation, water and air pollution, and waste production.
A few innovative firms are now fusing bamboo into durable hardwoods; thermally-modifying woods to make them harder and more disease-resistant; and producing modified polymerized and acetylated woods. In addition, there are a now a range of sustainable American hardwoods, like .
Source: ; s, Green Living
Organizations
Resources
, Natural Resources Defense Council
, Ken Bland, Structure Magazine, 2005
, The Dirt, American Society of Landscape Architects
, The Dirt, American Society of Landscape Architects
, The Dirt, American Society of Landscape Architects
, National Resource Defense Council
, Forest Stewardship Council
, Landscape for Life
, Green Living Ideas
Research
"," World Resources Institute and World Business Council on Sustainable Development (WBCSD). June, 2009
¡°,¡± Paul H. Falk, Forest Products Journal, 2009
Projects
Sweetwater Spectrum Residential, Sonoma, California
Roche + Roche Landscape Architecture
Drs. Julian and Raye Richardson Apartments, San Francisco
Andrea Cochran Landscape Architecture
300 Ivy, San Francisco, California
Fletcher Studio