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Brock Commons is a student accommodation building for the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Completed in September 2016, it currently holds the title of the world’s tallest timber building, standing at 53-metres tall. Credit: Acton Ostry Architects.
Brock Commons CLT panel lift. Credit: Acton Ostry Architects.
Norway's 14 storey Treet (tree) contains 62 apartments and all its load baring structures are wooden.
The proposed 80 storey high Oakwood Timber Tower, dubbed 'The Toothpick', could dramatically change London's skyline. The city scape has already seen the Shard, the Gherkin and even the Cheesegrater! Credit: PLP Architecture/ Cambridge University
An artist's impression of Oakwood Timber Tower. Credit: PLP Architecture/ Cambridge University
The 10 storey Forte apartment block in Melbourne, Australia.
Constructing the Forte building.
5 King Street - a new office building in Brisbane now under construction. It will be 10 storey's high, providing 14,000 m2 of office space.
'Tratoppen' (treetops) Stockholm's tallest building – a 133-metre wooden skyscraper covered in numbers, which would be erected on top of a 1960s car park in the city centre. Credit: Anders Berensson Architects which has unveiled the conceptual plans
Credit: Anders Berensson Architects
Inside Tratoppen. Credit: Anders Berensson Architects
Tratoppen Paper fold model. Credit: Anders Berensson Architects
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