There are
reasons wood buildings have evolved the way they have.
Not exact matches
Walking on these bare
wood floors with bare feet feels heavenly, and for some
reason (even though I imagine they have been painted for so very long) makes me feel all that closer to the original state of the house, the
wood and trees that it is
built of, and the hardworking hands of the very people who
built it.
Toys can sometimes have beak conditioners
built into them, and
wood can also help keep the bird's bill in good shape, although this is not the most important
reason to keep toys in the bird's cage.
For that
reason, an elevated
wood bridge was
built to allow visitors to explore inland to the namesake waterfall where the resort gets its name.
Buildings from Quebec never get the exposure that english North American ones do; there is no
reason that a firm the size of Gallienne Moisan should have such a lousy website, without any photographs of a
building that has been completed for a couple of years, or that the english architectural press would appear to ignore an eighty thousand square foot sustainable
wood building, but they do.
The Lucien Cornil Student Residence was
built out of
wood for all the usual
reasons, according to ArchDaily:
For these
reasons, to use
wood as the main component for high - rise
buildings may at first sight appear to be unusual.
The FWPA study found that the average life of a house was 61 years, but
wood product failure or decay were not the main
reasons for demolition; these were site redevelopment (58 per cent) or the
building no longer suiting (28 per cent).
And the study also found that «the average life of a house was 61 years, but
wood product failure or decay were not the main
reasons for demolition; these were site redevelopment (58 per cent) or the
building no longer suiting (28 per cent).»