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- Cross-Laminated Timber Structural Floor and Roof Design
CLT is identified as a structural material, defined in IBC Chapter 23 with reference to the PRG 320 standard and the 2015 NDS CLT framing is allowed within Construction Types III, IV, and V, and for roof members in Types I and II roof assemblies requiring a 1-hour fire-resistance rating or less
- Cordova Bay Elementary School | NLT walls and CLT roof combined
Originally designed as a full CLT structure, NLT was chosen to replace CLT for the roof structure due to a combination of factors - including its superior spanning capabilities, its aesthetic, and its cost effectiveness
- Mass Timber, CLT, GLT, NLT, and Others: What Does it All Mean? Plus . . .
But the two-way structural capacity of CLT panels also makes it ideal not only as floor or roof (horizontal) panels but also as wall (vertical) panels Many buildings utilize CLT in this way as load bearing walls and even as building cores for egress stairs, elevators and mechanical, designed to also take on lateral loads such as wind and
- Nail-laminated timber - Natural Resources Canada
Nail-laminated timber (NLT) is manufactured from two-by-four (38 mm x 89 mm), two-by-six (38 mm x 140 mm) or larger boards of wood Laminations are nailed to each other to create solid prefabricated elements for floor, wall or roof applications
- Cross-Laminated Timber (CLT) | The Canadian Wood Council (CWC)
CLT offers design flexibility and low environmental impacts for floor, roof and wall elements within innovative mid-rise and tall wood buildings For further information on CLT, refer to the following resources: ANSI APA PRG 320 Standard for Performance-Rated Cross-Laminated Timber CSA O86 Engineering design in wood
- Technote 30 - Nail Laminated Timber (NLT)
Nail Laminated Timber (NLT) is a mass timber product created by turning dimensional lumber on edge and mechanically fastening the laminations together with nails NLT is most commonly utilized for floor and roof systems, though it can also be used for walls, elevator shafts, and stair shafts
- Exploring CLT Roofs: Versatility Redefined - ConstruktCLT
Innovative CLT roofs showcase mass timber's efficiency and sustainability, debunking excessive timber use in buildings Engineering and design maximise performance and minimize material for green, high-performance structures
- Whats the Difference Between All These Laminated Timbers? - Treehugger
Cross-Laminated Timber, or CLT, differs from Glulam in that the wood is glued up with each layer of boards being perpendicular to each other Because the lamstock is going in two directions,
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