- Who We Are
- Shop
- Latest News
- Benefits of Timber Frame
- - What is Timber Frame?
- - Facts and Figures
- - The Environment
- - Sustainable Construction
- - Grand Designs
- - Zero Carbon
- Q-Mark Quality Scheme
- Part L
- Education and Training
- Understanding the Issues
- Search for a Member
- Benefits of Membership
- Free Downloads
- Sitemap
- Contact Us
- Members Area
Search our database to locate a
Timber Frame Manufacturer:
Search to locate aTimber Frame Designer:
Search to locate aTimber Frame Erector:
Search to locate anIndustry Supplier:
Facts and Figures
Timber frame around the world
- In many parts of the world, timber frame is the norm – an engineered and proven
system.
- Over 70% of people in the developed world live in timber frame housing.
- In the USA and Canada it accounts for 90% of low-rise buildings.
- Timber frame is the most popular form of house construction in Scotland, thanks
largely to its suitability for a cold climate where homes need to be able to be
built fast, be very energy efficient and keep people comfortable throughout the
year.
- Timber frame housing is also used effectively in hot and humid climates, including parts of Australia, Malaysia and elsewhere – proof that it can cope with climate change in the UK.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
UK market statistics*
Unprecedented success for Timber Frame in 2005
- Timber frame housing grew by 15% in 2005, compared to a 2.0% decline for all
other methods of construction.
- Timber frame housing now has a 20% market share in the UK. With an increase of 2.4% on the year this represents the single biggest increase in market share since modern records have been kept!
- By 2008 One in Four new homes will be timber frame.
- Over 73% of new homes in Scotland are built using timber frame, up from 65% in
2004.
- England market share rose from 10.7% to 13.3% in 2005.
- Wales market share rose from 11.6% to 12.9% in 2005.
- In Northern Ireland, market share increased from 7% to 7.7% in 2005.
- Over half of all new social housing in the UK is timber frame- 58% in 2005
- Rise in timber frame market driven by growth in detached dwellings and flatted developments.These two largest sectors now comprise 66% of all new buildings in 2005.
* Figures taken from UKTFA market report 2005, based on independently collected
and analysed data from members.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Manufacturing capacity
- The UK timber frame industry continues to invest in increased capacity to meet
rising demand – production capacity was up by 13% in 2004.
- The sector is worth nearly £425 million per year.
- Continuing expansion of the timber frame industry is inevitably changing the
structure of the industry – in short, there are more companies providing more
volume.
- It is estimated that the industry was working to a 92% utilisation rate in 2004.
- The industry needs stable, sustained growth in the UK housing market to ensure the full benefits and efficiencies of its manufacturing base are realised.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wood is good
- Timber is an organic, non-toxic and naturally renewable building material.
- Although worldwide, deforestation remains a significant issue, it is not caused
by the European construction industry which mainly uses softwood.
- Over 90% of all wood consumed in Europe is sourced from European forests.
- UK timber frame uses 99% European softwood.
- The more wood we use, the more our forests grow, because in Europe we are committed
to planting more trees than we harvest.
- Every year our forests grow by over 3,500 square miles – equivalent to an area
the size of Cyprus.
- Forests act as huge carbon sinks. The total carbon sequestered in Europe’s forests is over 9.5 million tonnes.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whole life performance
- Wood is effectively a carbon-neutral material (even allowing for transport).
- Timber frame has the lowest CO2 cost of any commercially available building material.
- For every cubic metre of wood used instead of other building materials, 0.8 tonne
of CO2 is saved from the atmosphere.
- 77% of the energy used in the production of wood products comes from wood residues
and recovered wood.
- Strength for strength, concrete uses 5 times (and steel uses 6 times) more energy
to produce than timber.
- Waste and ‘end of life’ wood can be easily recycled.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eco-friendly homes
- A typical 100 square metre two-storey detached timber frame home contains 5-6
cubic metres more wood than the equivalent masonry house.
- Consequently, every timber frame home saves about 4 tonnes of CO2 (about the
amount produced by driving 14,000 miles).
- In addition to these CO2 savings, the operational cost of a house can be reduced
due to timber’s thermal efficiency.
- If all UK houses built since 1945 had been timber frame, then over 300 million
tonnes of CO2 would have been saved.
- Most wood products, from timber frame systems to joinery, can help designers and developers improve their EcoHomes ratings.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Construction efficiency
- Timber frame has 30% shorter, more predictable construction time than brick and
block.
- This means a faster return on investment, reduced disruption to local communities,
and tidier, safer and more efficient sites.
- A typical timber frame house can be weather-tight in less than 5 days.
- Timber frame construction helps to promote greater partnering, better control and project savings through improved supply chain integration.
