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Media Release | Mar. 11, 2004

UBC's New Timber Building Research Group Brings Cutting-Edge Technology to B.C.'S Forest Industry

The recently formed Timber Building Technology Research Group at UBC's Centre for Advanced Wood Processing, Canada's national centre of excellence for the wood products industry, will unveil its new Hundegger K2 Timber Processing Centre, a state-of-the-art fully automated joinery machine able to produce components for timber frame buildings without measurement, layout, or set-up time.

This is the first machine of its kind to be installed in a university setting anywhere in the world. The $450,000 machine is on loan to UBC from the manufacturer, Hans Hundegger Maschinenbau GmbH in Hawangen, Germany, for three years. It will be used for teaching and research projects, as well as for workshops and courses for architects, engineers, and timber framing industry workers.

The computerized machine cuts the building time of a timber frame house from one month to less than six hours, lowering building costs substantially.

"The Hundegger technology puts high-end timber framing constructions within reach of more people," says Dr. Philip Evans, the director of the Centre for Advanced Wood Processing.

The Hundegger K2 system demonstration is part of a full day of presentations and demonstrations focusing on market opportunities and new technologies in the field of wood building marking the launch of the new UBC Timber Building Technology Research Group.

The unit, which has been several years in the making, involves the departments of Architecture, Civil and Mechanical Engineering, and Wood Science, as well as the Centre for Advanced Wood Processing, and will address issues related to the design, performance and building of timber construction.

"The new research unit will take an integrated approach to wood building," explains Dr. David Barrett, the coordinator of the new Timber Building Technology Research Group. "Our aim is to expand the use of wood in construction by taking advantage of advanced technologies."

The Hundegger system will be an integral part of the group's efforts.

"This type of technology could greatly help the coastal lumber industry," adds Barrett. "In British Columbia, we have high-value wood, high-quality timber in large cross-sections, and there is great interest in high-value products."

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Contact

Iain MacDonald
Centre for Advanced Wood Processing
Tel: 604.822.1472
E-mail: iain.macdonald@ubc.ca

Cristina Calboreanu
UBC Public Affairs
Tel: 604.822.6170
E-mail: cristina.calboreanu@ubc.ca

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Last reviewed 22-Sep-2006

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