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Milwaukee Is On Track To House World's Tallest Timber Skyscraper

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

So I want you to imagine a skyscraper that is constructed not from steel, not from concrete, but mostly of wood. I'm asking you this because Milwaukee is soon going to be home to the world's tallest timber skyscraper. Susan Bence from member station WUWM has more.

SUSAN BENCE, BYLINE: It's hard to imagine any kind of tower on this nondescript construction site formerly home to a corner pizzeria in downtown Milwaukee. Architect Jason Korb designed the 25-story building that will stretch to the sky.

JASON KORB: They have to drive these pile foundations down up to 165 feet. And you can see they're starting to weld several pieces of deep foundation together.

BENCE: Developer Tim Gokhman says while steel and concrete do factor into the project, its focal point is a warehouse full of timber manufactured specifically for this project.

TIM GOKHMAN: They're actually fairly standard pieces of dimensional lumber.

BENCE: Softwood species like Douglas fir and southern yellow pine are harvested, milled and groomed for what's called dimensional stability.

GOKHMAN: They're being glued, pressed together in a factory. And because it's being done by a machine, it is infinitely more precise.

BENCE: Mass timber first got noticed in the U.S. and Canada about six years ago. But Austria has been fabricating it for tall buildings for nearly 30 years. What's special about the Milwaukee project is its height. When the high-end apartment complex opens in 2022, it will top the height of the world's tallest wood structure that's now in Norway. Tim Gokhman's enthusiasm for the material is helping Brian Brashaw. He's with the U.S. Forest Service and is on a mission to cultivate mass timber markets around the country.

BRIAN BRASHAW: We are seeing incredibly innovative projects that are pushing the envelope. They're creating this opportunity.

BENCE: Brashaw says innovative structures spark advances in mass timber technology, which in turn helps with forest planning.

BRASHAW: It gives us the ability to manage lands that are in need of forest management. And many forests are, really, economic drivers for rural communities.

BENCE: Daniel Safarik is with the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. He sees mass timber construction as key to housing the world's ever more urban population.

DANIEL SAFARIK: And to have a material that could allow us to build in high density safely and which locks up carbon, you know, seems like a win-win-win.

BENCE: Trees sequester carbon dioxide, and the wood holds it captive, even when made into lumber and used to create a skyscraper.

For NPR News, I'm Susan Bence in Milwaukee. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Susan Bence entered broadcasting in an untraditional way. After years of avid public radio listening, Susan returned to school and earned a bachelor's degree in Journalism from the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. She interned for WUWM News and worked with the Lake Effect team, before being hired full-time as a WUWM News reporter / producer.