France's current 'wood wastes' management seems inefficient in settling on a durable reclaimed timber branch that would support reuse practices in architecture. We assume that there is a set of 'values' attached to timber members that should be revealed to estimate their market value better. Through the literature, we observe that the economy of a deconstruction project used to be considered significant, while embodied carbon is nowadays of major concern. Moreover, as Circular Economy and Cascading concept emerged, the meaning of durability has decreased in favour of reversibility that could guarantee a flow of material circulation. The problem is that these ideas involve probable rebound effects due to energy engaged in transportation and the transformation of reclaimed resources. Our reflection comes from a field study experience where we participated in the reuse process of timber members deconstructed from a textile mill. We observed that the lack of economy and the lack of 'values' identification resulted in depreciating the operation's efficiency, whose initial objective was to maximise the extraction and diffusion of reusable elements as much as feasible. Our research focuses on construction materials and massive structural timber members, which still seem challenging to reintegrate into new buildings.
CITATION STYLE
Lebossé, M., Besançon, F., Halin, G., & Fuchs, A. (2023). VALUES OF RECLAIMED TIMBER. In 13th World Conference on Timber Engineering, WCTE 2023 (Vol. 6, pp. 3608–3617). World Conference on Timber Engineering (WCTE). https://doi.org/10.52202/069179-0470
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