Proponents of cross-laminated timber were up in arms when the government announced its plans to ban combustible materials from the external walls of high-rise buildings. But now the nascent industry is fighting back, reports Joey Gardiner
When the government last summer announced its plans to ban combustible materials from the walls of residential high-rise buildings, it prompted an immediate outcry from the growing band of developers, contractors, designers and manufacturers involved in using cross-laminated timber. Since its first use in the UK in 2004, the proponents of this form of engineered timber - known as CLT - have claimed it can hugely speed up construction, improve site safety and save money - at the same time as it is saving the world from climate change.
As uptake has grown in recent years, so the structural properties of CLT have come to the fore, allowing taller and taller timber structures, including a number of high-profile projects above six storeys - the height the combustibles ban kicks in. Fears were raised that the CLT was - effectively - being banned by the government as an accidental side-effect of the Grenfell tragedy. One of the leading proponents, Anthony Thistleton, founder of architect Waugh Thistleton, which designs virtually all its projects in timber, said that last summer's announcement could prompt
Indeed, when the final legislation came out and the ban was confirmed, the government's own impact assessment admitted that it was "likely to slow down the use of engineered timber […] in the medium to long term".
Four months on, though, and the nascent CLT industry is in fight-back mode, determined to make the point that reports of its death have been greatly exaggerated. But it is up against a degree of understandable post-Grenfell client nervousness about using what is undeniably a combustible material, and lobbying from other parts of the industry determined to highlight concerns. So what does the future hold for CLT?
What crisis?
According to Nic Crawley, an associate technical designer at CLT-friendly architect AHMM, there are now between 500 and 600 UK buildings constructed from this new technology, and of those, he guesses, only a "pretty small proportion" would have been affected by the government's combustibles ban. The ban - which specifies Class A1 or A2 fire performance from all materials in the "external structure" of a building - is limited both to buildings above 18m (around six storeys), and also to residential buildings only. While notable recent high-rise housing schemes such as Lendlease's 10-storey dRMM-designed Trafalgar House project at Elephant & Castle would not be permitted in the same form now, it is thought most CLT projects would be unaffected. Rupert Scott, membership manager at wood research centre
Most importantly, say CLT's proponents, even in affected high-rise buildings, the restrictions don't rule out using CLT - they just rule it out from the external wall.
Coming up with hybrid designs whereby a structural CLT core and floors sit alongside external walls from another material, typically light-gauge steel, is, they say, not difficult.
In fact, Waugh Thistleton's Thistleton says a group of engineered wood-friendly architects, engineers, manufacturers and contractors has already got together to work
Tony Jones, Concrete Centre
Thistleton now says his dire warnings of last summer were overdone - the product of speaking to Building just hours after having read - and been spooked by - the draft regulations. "I allowed myself to get worked up," he says. "But we need to be clear - this is absolutely not a ban on CLT. It just means we need to do something else for external walls. We might even be able to increase the level of prefabrication."
Jonas Lencer, director at dRMM, says his practice is already working to revise a part-designed CLT scheme caught by the regs, working alongside specialist contractor B&K Structures to "design out" CLT from the facade. "So far our analysis of the building, of the time in design and the construction programme, suggests that taking out structural timber from the facade will have very very little impact on the scheme."
Evidence
While everyone in the CLT community agrees the combustibles ban itself doesn't rule the technology out, not everyone is so sanguine about the new regs. There is considerable anger from some that the housing ministry (MHCLG) pressed ahead with the ban in the form it did despite being told by CLT's backers there was no evidence it would improve fire safety. They see it as particularly galling that a ban designed to stop a repeat of the cladding system fire at Grenfell has ended up covering the whole of the external wall construction, not just the cladding. Liam Dewar, director of one of the biggest CLT specialist contractors
"After Grenfell, the public
Thistleton adds: "We're very clear that CLT doesn't pose any additional risk. But the government was not interested in evidence. It was a political move."
When asked about the potential impact on CLT of the ban, government sources admit the ban rules it out for tall buildings but insist any unintended consequences were less important than keeping people safe.
The anger from CLT's proponents stems from fears that despite the limited nature of the
However, housing association Swan, which last year invested in an offsite housebuilding factory to build prefabricated CLT homes, said last week it would now have to find "a suitable modular solution" for its planned high-rise homes. Eurban's Dewar says: "There's a perception that this bans CLT from all buildings above six storeys. It's not reality, but there's a short-term risk related to this media perception." AHMM's Crawley adds: "The worry is if clients think it is banned, then they won't consider using it."
Potentially more serious than that, however, are developers' perceptions of how insurers and real-world home-buyers view the product. Notably, L&G's statement to Building said that "both customer & regulatory requirements" would be assessed to determine which materials to use.
While he thinks this will pass quickly, he adds: "Because of the way these regs came out, the public perception is that all combustible material is dangerous. That's a real problem because suddenly you could be in World In Action territory."
The Cube Building, a 10-storey residential block in Hackney was Europe's tallest CLT building when it completed in 2015. It features a hybrid structure including a concrete core and some steel framework necessitated by the complex offset floorplates
Opposition
CLT's supporters have more than simply public perception to fight - they are also up against lobbying from other parts of the industry who are seeking to highlight evidence of fire safety problems with CLT. Tony Jones,
Jones says the regulation is particularly necessary because CLT allows the construction of taller buildings with automatically higher occupant risk. He cites the opposition of the International Association of Fire Chiefs to a proposed relaxation of US rules banning CLT, and a 2018 paper by Arup and Edinburgh University, as evidence of the risks the technology proposes - risks unsurprisingly rejected by its proponents. Proponents of engineered timber, while accepting that wood products are of course combustible, have previously pointed to long-standing research showing that heavy timber such as glulam beams, while initially burning, produce a thick and highly insulating char layer which limits fire spread and ultimately protects the beam and puts the fire out.
The recent Arup paper, however, suggests that timber layers in CLT panels can sometimes delaminate in a blaze, exposing fresh uncharred wood to the fire, thereby prolonging and intensifying it. The Concrete Centre's Jones says this is a "critical" new finding. "I think we have a body of evidence of the risks of CLT. Whatever its benefits, you can't promote productivity at the expense of safety," he says.
Thistleton responds: "More information is needed following these limited tests, and we need to look potentially at how we glue the boards, for example. But these were tests with exposed CLT - in all our flats our CLT is completely encapsulated. The buildings are safe.
"The fact is that because we're building with
Thistleton disagrees: "The reality is the evidence says we've got 12 years left to sort out climate change - we've got to start changing the way we do things. And we've got to keep pushing the message about the safety of CLT. It's not only quicker to put up; it's safer, healthier, lighter and locks away carbon."
Time will tell whether this message is heeded by clients in a post-Grenfell world.