TIMBER CONSTRUCTION World Housing(世界木结构房屋).pdf
文本预览下载声明
TIMBER CONSTRUCTION
Chris Arnold, Building Systems Development, USA
BACKGROUND
Wood construction is common for many single-family houses throughout the world. In
areas where timber and wood materials are easily accessible, wood construction is often
considered to be the cheapest and best approach for small housing structures.
Six main types of wood construction are listed in the encyclopedia. These types use all
forms of timber available from logs to sawn/shaped timbers to smaller branches and
leaves. These types also utilize various types of wall coverings from plant-based coverings
to timber materials to earthen materials, such as mud or stone. The first type of wood
construction is thatch construction, which is generally a traditional construction type.
For examples of this type, see the traditional construction section of the encyclopedia.
Other types include post-and-beam frame construction, walls with bamboo/reed mesh
and post (waffle and daub), wooden frames with or without infill, and stud-wall frames
with plywood/gypsum board sheathing. Two final types are wood panel construction
and log construction.
Only some of the main types of wood construction are discussed in detail in the
encyclopedia. The first of these construction types is stud-wall frame with plywood/
gypsum board sheathing (Figure 1), which is popular worldwide and is the main type
used in the United States (WHE Report 90), Canada (WHE Report 82), and Japan (WHE
Report 86). For this type, walls are made of vertical timber elements of rectangular cross-
section covered in light plywood or composite sheathing, with roofs made of timber
members or prefabricated trusses, which are sheathed similar to the walls. The building
foundations are usually concrete but sometimes are made of stone. In Japan, a post-
and-beam frame is also constructed. It is similar to the stud-wall frame, except that it
uses diagonal me
显示全部