Engineered Wood Staunton VA

Engineered wood products have been on the market in Staunton for decades, gaining entry in home building when Trus Joist invented the I-joist in 1969. For years, those I-shaped structural members cost far more than the wood beams they replaced and were used only in high-end custom homes.

Local Companies

Clark Construction
(540) 337-5486
2080 Old Greenville Rd
Staunton, VA
Cornerstone Construction of Augusta Inc
(540) 886-0178
Staunton, VA
Community Builders Inc
(540) 885-5876
871 Middlebrook Ave
Staunton, VA
Todd H I Jr Jack
(540) 885-3997
Staunton, VA
Stephens Ken W Construction
(540) 363-5121
2480 Laurel Hill Rd
Staunton, VA
David Huffman General Contractor Inc
(540) 886-3355
1234 Middlebrook Ave
Staunton, VA
Team Right of Way Inc
(540) 213-1340
297 Commerce Rd
Staunton, VA
Zendt Contruction Llc
(540) 885-3550
24 Thornrose Ave
Staunton, VA
Darrell Marshall
(540) 887-8339
100 Bell Creek Dr
Staunton, VA
Specialized Construction & Remodeling Llc
(540) 885-5303
37 Oak Ridge Ln
Staunton, VA

Provided By:

Source: BUILDING PRODUCTS Magazine
Publication date: September 1, 2005

By Sharon O'Malley

Summit Homes in Cordova, Tenn., has been building houses with engineered wood for so long that office manager Kevin Yoon “can't even remember some of the problems we used to have with real wood.”

But he says he knows his firm would be building different kinds of structures without the engineered I-joists, laminated veneer lumber (LVL), and glued laminated beams (glulams) that offer sturdy, warp-resistant alternatives to solid-sawn lumber.

“Architects can draw some crazy stuff,” says Yoon, whose company, a production builder, will construct 250 homes this year. “Some of the spans … can go up to 48 feet. Before, there was no product that could do that.”

In fact, engineered wood products have been on the market for decades, gaining entry in home building when Trus Joist invented the I-joist in 1969. For years, those I-shaped structural members cost far more than the wood beams they replaced and were used only in high-end custom homes.

But during the past 15 years that BUILDING PRODUCTS has been in existence, engineered wood garnered widespread approval as new types were introduced to meet design challenges, and as engineering improved and prices fell somewhat. Today, engineered wood still costs at least 10 percent more than traditional lumber in most markets, and only very expensive new homes can boast 100 percent engineered frames.

Click here to read full article from Replacement Contractor


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