Installation Guide
2
ENGINEERED WOOD CONSTRUCTION GUIDE 
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 FORM NO. E30V 
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 © 2011 APA – THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION 
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 WWW.APAWOOD.ORG
Engineered Wood Construction Guide
Engineered  wood products are a  good choice for  the  environment.  They  are 
manufactured for years of trouble-free, dependable use. They help reduce waste 
by decreasing disposal costs and product damage. Wood is a renewable resource 
that is easily manufactured into a variety of viable products.
A few facts about wood.
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 We’re  growing more wood every  day.  Forests fully cover one-third  of the 
United  States’  and  one-half  of  Canada’s  land  mass.  American  landowners 
plant more than two billion trees every year. In addition, millions of trees seed 
naturally. The forest products industry,  which comprises about 15 percent of 
forestland ownership, is responsible for 41 percent of replanted forest acreage. 
That works out to more than one billion trees a year, or about three million trees planted every 
day. This high rate of replanting accounts for the fact that each year, 27 percent more timber is 
grown than is harvested. Canada’s replanting record shows a fourfold increase in the number of 
trees planted between 1975 and 1990.
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  Life  Cycle  Assessment  shows  wood  is  the  greenest  building  product.
A  2004  Consortium  for  Research  on  Renewable  Industrial  Materials 
(CORRIM)  study  gave  scientific  validation  to  the  strength  of  wood  as  a 
green building product.  In examining  building  products’ life cycles  – from 
extraction of the raw material to demolition of  the building at the end of its 
long lifespan – CORRIM found that wood was better for the environment than steel or concrete 
in terms of embodied energy, global warming potential, air emissions, water emissions and solid 
waste production. For the complete details of the report, visit www.CORRIM.org.
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 Manufacturing  wood  is  energy  efficient.
Wood  products made  up  47 percent of all 
industrial  raw  materials  manufactured  in  the 
United States, yet consumed only 4 percent of the 
energy needed to manufacture all industrial raw 
materials, according to a 1987 study.
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  Good news for a healthy planet. For every ton of wood grown, a young forest 
produces 1.07 tons of oxygen and absorbs 1.47 tons of carbon dioxide.
Wood: It’s the natural choice for  the environment, for  design and for strong, 
lasting construction.
WOOD
The Natural Choice
NOTICE: 
The recommendations 
in this guide apply only 
to products that bear 
the APA trademark. 
Only products bearing 
the APA trademark 
are subject to the 
Association’s quality 
auditing program.
  Percent of  Percent of 
Material  Production  Energy Use
Wood  47   4
Steel  23  48
Aluminum   2   8
©2011 APA – THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION • ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. • ANY COPYING, MODIFICATION, DISTRIBUTION OR OTHER USE OF THIS PUBLICATION OTHER THAN AS EXPRESSLY AUTHORIZED BY APA IS PROHIBITED BY THE U.S. COPYRIGHT LAWS.










