NEWS
  GREEN EBOOK
  BLOG & VIDEO
  ECO BUILDINGS
 You are here  timber cladding  blog vent image  Roof truss image

NEWS >

GREEN BUILDING EBOOK >

   Read chapters

BLOG >

VIDEO >

ECOTIST BUILDINGS >

   Green building

   Gardening & green roof

   Solar energy

   Wind energy

   Insulation

   Wood

   Timber cladding

   Water

   Image library

GREEN CONTACTS >

CONTACT & ABOUT US

COPYRIGHT & LEGAL

PRIVACY

logo

Wood

NEWS: This is very short extract from a Wood and also Materials chapter in our Green Home & Building Ebook published by Ecotist - 400 pages, 105 chapters, read sample chapters!
See more >

Wood is a great material to work with, for the structure of houses as well as interiors and fittings.

Wooden roof beams

Wood comes in many types for the builder, mainly:

  • hardwoods - such as Ash, Beech, Mahogany, Maple, Oak, Teak, Walnut
  • softwoods - such as Birch, Cedar, Pine, Larch, Redwood, Yew, Willow
  • wood based boards -
  • Laminated Board - ply and blockboard
  • Particle Boards - wood chipboard and flaxboard - particles of wood bonded with a resin binder
  • Fibre Boards - such as hardboard and MDF (Medium Density Fibreboard)

Alert!

MDF is very useful but dangerous to work as the dust is toxic due to the manufactured bonding agents and resins used to create it at low temperature. This is usually urea formaldehyde, but some fibreboards, including exterior or marine board, uses stronger glues such as phenol formaldehyde.

Formaldehyde is a carcinogen even at very low levels, and MDF and similar should not be worked on indoors, unless extraction systems are used (any professional carpenter will have these).

Always wear a mask when drilling, cutting etc, for all woods.

Comments

Avoid hardwoods, especially as any tropical wood, including plys. Try and buy from a sustainable source marked as FSC, but even these labels are prone to corruption as the profits are so great from illegal logging.

Use European softwoods such as pine and birch ply. Again try and use woods from sustainable forests.

Use sustainable engineered woods such as bamboo - made from a grass!

Reuse your existing wooden floors before ripping them up, even if you are replacing them with FSC timber.

Sanding and varnishing is very easy and also cheaper. Be careful of dust and fumes.

Try and find reclaimed or recycled floorboards.

MDF is good for cupboards and fitted wardrobes as it is rigid and easy to paint. It is safe once finished.

Unfinished wood can be treated with natural oil and waxes. This allows the pores of the wood to stay open and lets it breathe, which helps stabilise relative humidity in a building. We have used oak worksurfaces which are waxed regularly.

There is a huge demand for all types of wood from emerging nations like China and India and so world stocks will be rapidly depleted, which makes using sustainable timber even more important.

There is an excellent guide to woods, very comprehensive, and updated, complete with vulnerability, available at:

Friends of the Earth - Different types of wood timber by A to Z

http://tinyurl.com/235fzt

Top >