Skip to main content
search
0

Z10 Purpose Made Joinery (Checklist) G#1593 N#1524

By 26 July 2014August 25th, 2019Checklist, Code, Encyclopaedia, New Build, Refurbishment

Z10 Purpose Made Joinery Checklist

GBE > Encyclopaedia > Code > Checklist > Entry > Z > G#1593 N#1524

Z10 Purpose Made Joinery Checklist
Checklist:


Problems:

  • Tree cutting is seasonal:
    • unseasoned hardwood framed buildings:
    • be aware of the potential for delay until next tree cutting occurs,
    • plan projects around this issue
  • Acidic species:
    • tanning run off can stain porous materials below,
    • provide temporary or sacrificial protective materials or coatings
    • can corrode or stain ferrous metal fasteners or visa versa
    • use austenitic stainless steel fasteners (screws/nails etc.)

Misunderstandings:

  • Durable timbers do not all come from the Tropical Rain Forests
  • There are durable softwoods as well as hardwoods
  • Prefabrication off site does not reduce offcuts,
    • but the off cuts have a greater potential to be used in a factory rather than put in a skip on site

Solutions:

  • Grow trees to be available to replace roof and other timbers in 60-120 years
  • Use any existing trees that are to be cut down as part of the works

Consider:

  • Choose locally sourced timber:
    • first > last:
    • Site > Town > County > Region > Country > Continent > World
  • FSC certified forest timber,
    • it addresses more of the sustainability issues,
    • 276 sources in the UK.
  • Oak and many other species are durable and are available in the UK and Europe
  • Off site prefabrication to reduce on site waste
  • Design structure for appropriate life See A90
    • Short life: 30 years
    • Normal Life: 60 years
    • Long life: 120 years:
  • Design frame for deconstruction, salvage and reuse in future at end of design life. See A90
  • Softwood or Hardwood in place of steel structure
  • Floor structure, roof frame, decking and ramps are opportunities for timber structures made from home-grown structural timber, reducing the need for cement and aggregates on the project
  • Glued laminated timber where poor strength grade timber can be substituted in the middle of the section where it is least stressed
  • Potential to reduce the self weight of the section without significant loss of strength
  • Use of prefabricated pre-insulated breathing wall, floor and roof panels
  • Timber structure in place of concrete
    • to avoid temporary formwork materials (plywood and softwood) used in formwork,
    • potentially used a few times then thrown away to landfill as waste

Avoid:

  • Wood substitutes: unless it is 100% recycled plastic
    • Cradle to Cradle:
      • avoid blending natural (wood fibre, wood flour) and technical (plastic binder)
      • ingredients that cannot be separated at end of life,
    • Proviso: unless the manufacturer:
      • leases the product to the user,
      • has a tack back scheme in place,
      • is already recycling their own post consumer product
  • Illegally forested timber
    • (Use EUTR procedures)
  • Non-sustainably managed forested timber
  • Tropical Rainforest timbers,
    • (there are probably other species which will do the job you need from nearer the site)
  • Endangered species of timber,
    • (Check the CITIES website)
    • See NGS SPECIES TABLE
  • Clear felled virgin forest timber
  • Clear felled plantations if not replanted
  • Indonesian Hardwood,
    • most is reported to be illegally logged:
    • destroys forests, communities and habitation
  • Adhesives if fasteners will do the job required
  • Burning timber off cuts on site

Minimise:

  • PEFC certified forest timber, it does not address all the sustainability issues adequately, choose FSC first
  • Synthetic adhesives if natural alternatives can do the job required

Substitute:

  • Specify by performance requirement then the suppliers can choose available FSC species to do the job required and offer a range of colours close to your requirements

Health:

  • Avoid formaldehyde adhesives in boards, compound or laminated sections See Z20

Wellbeing:

  • Use planed and arrised softwood sections to minimize splinters whilst handling sections

Safety:

Precautionary principle:

Resource Efficiency Issues:

Reduce:

  • Use compound I section timbers, in place of solid sections:
  • reduces use of timber, resource use reduction
  • reduces fuel to transport
  • easier to handle on site, often by just one person

Reclaim:

  • All healthy timber that can be reused

Reuse:

  • Second hand timber
  • FSC now recognises reuse of timber
  • Salvaged timber from existing building in:
    • Softwood in stud walls, floors or roofs
    • Floor boarding
    • Doors, Windows

Recycle:

  • Damaged untreated timber
  • Make bat and bird boxes with offcuts
  • Use as mulch in landscape

Recover:

  • Nutrients from untreated timber by composting
  • Energy from timber offcuts by saving in a biomass fuel store for use in the employer’s biomass boiler

Waste Issues:

Hazardous waste & Deleterious Substances:

  • Preservative treated timber is hazardous
  • Do not use preservative treated timber in bat and bird boxes
  • Do not use preservative treated timber in childrens toys
  • Do not use preservative treated timber in food growing planters, raised beds
  • Preservative treated timber is potentially inert in landfill, but leaching may occur

Waste statistics

  • 30 m tonnes (33% of 90 m. tonnes/year) of waste is offcuts (not all timber)
  • 9.4 m tonnes (10.2% of 90 m. tonnes/year) of waste is Temporary works, Site hoardings and Formwork

Waste minimisation:

End of Life options:

  • Dismantle for reuse (build it with the right fasteners)

Appropriateness:

  • off site prefabrication to reduce waste:
  • Use of prefabricated pre-insulated breathing wall, floor and roof panels

Competence:

  • Reclaimed timber for reuse:
    • check suitability for use in strutural application
    • there are 900 timber strength graders in UK
    • some structural engineers will assess timbers for reuse
  • Choose species with the right properties for the job
    • Dont choose your favorite coloured species for every application
    • Dont choose your favorite coloured species for external applications the colour will fade to silver or grey

Effectiveness:

  • Steel sections can be smaller than timber to meet structural requirements
  • If fire resistance is required steel sections get considerably bigger than timber
  • Encasing steel or applying intumescent paint increases cost and environmental impact
  • Timber sequesters carbon from the atmosphere so reduced atmospheric carbon now
  • Timber buildings can be carbon negative

Yardstick:

  • A standard is being developed to permit embodied carbon and sequestered carbon to be taken into account in Total Carbon calculations for buildings

Maintenance issue:

  • Untreated unseasoned unfinished durable species timber need no decoration and need no maintenance of that decoration

Information sources:

  • The Wood Explorer(USA, part free, mostly paid for access, via apps)
    • A massive knowledge-based site featuring 1648 tree species.
    • TRADA
    • askTRADA

© GBE NGS ASWS Brian Murphy aka BrianSpecMan *
2008 – 25th July 2014 – 25th August 2019

Z10 Purpose Made Joinery Checklist
Images: 


 


© GBE NGS ASWS Brian Murphy aka BrianSpecMan *
2008 – 25th July 2014 – 25th August 2019

Z10 Purpose Made Joinery Checklist
See Also: 


GBE CHECKLIST


GBE JARGON BUSTER

Theme


GBE CPD


GBE LECTURES


GBE DEFECTS


GBE LINKS


GBE MANUFACTURERS


GBE SUPPLIERS

FSC Suppliers

Nationwide

East of England

East Midlands
West Midlands

GBE PRODUCTS


GBE MATERIALS


GBE SYSTEMS


GBE ELEMENTAL ASSEMBLIES


GBE CALCULATOR

  • Product

GBE DATA


GBE CAD

  • 2D and 3D SketchUp Product files
  • SketchUp files of Construction Sections

GBE GREEN BUILDING SPECIFICATION


GBE ROBUST SPECIFICATION

  • Robust Specification Work Sections:
  • G20
  • Z10
  • Z12
  • Z20

GBE LIBRARY


GBE PROJECTS


© GBE NGS ASWS Brian Murphy aka BrianSpecMan *
2008 – 25th July 2014 – 25th August 2019

Leave a Reply

Close Menu