Moses Structural Engineers

The Wood Construction Movement – Can You Accommodate It?

What is this wood movement?

Some like to think of the 21st century as the wood movement in construction, but that’s not what this article is about. This is about the wood movement on a much smaller scale. Wood is a hydroscopic material and without getting too technical, simply put, wood shrinks and swells with the change of its moisture content. As its moisture content reduces, wood shrinks in size, and as its moisture content increases, it swells. Wood shrinkage and swelling is a movement unique to wood.

Are there ways to reduce wood movement?

YES! Wood movement cannot be eliminated completely, but there are ways to minimize it.

  1. Avoid long exposure time to moisture during construction.
  2. Use kiln-dried materials (have less initial moisture content when it arrives on-site).
  3. Use engineered wood products (have a lower initial moisture content compared to non-engineered wood).
  4. Reduce height of wood used in the perpendicular to grain orientation (wood is an anisotropic material which means shrinkage and swelling are more prominent in the perpendicular to grain orientation compared to the parallel to grain orientation).

When and where is it most important to consider wood movement?

How to can this be accommodated?

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