Atlanta Suburb Limits Wood-Framed Buildings

In an era where cities all over the world are allowing larger and taller wood-framed buildings, the city of Sandy Springs just approved sweeping limitations on the construction practice.

2 minute read

September 1, 2016, 7:00 AM PDT

By James Brasuell @CasualBrasuell


Housing Construction

Alan Levine / Flickr

"Over the objections of the wood products industry, the Sandy Springs City Council has approved a building code change to prohibit wood-framed construction for future buildings taller than three stories and larger than 100,000 square feet," reports David Ibata.

"Supporters of the change cited safety issues, as well as matters of quality, durability and longevity of buildings in turning to steel and masonry," according to Ibata. Objectors include the American Wood Council and Georgia Forestry Association.

Writing for Construction Dive, a construction industry newsletter, Kim Slowey surveys the world for examples of the construction industry finding new, larger-scale uses for wood construction. We at Planetizen have noted the example of Toronto, Ontario, which relaxed its wood-framed building standards to allow for buildings up to six stories high. Paris, France approved a wood-framed building that will reach 35 stories high back in 2015. The T3 project in Minneapolis targets a height of seven stories. The latter project is nearing completion, as is visible on its very own live feed construction camera.

Slowey finds examples from Stockholm, Sweden, and London, U.K, of approved projects that will push the boundaries of previous wood-framed buildings. In the United States, according to Slowey, the U.S. Department of Agriculture sponsored the U.S. Tall Wood Building Competition last year. 

An article by Ely Portillo for The Charlotte Observer digs more into the implication of the actions of the Sandy Springs City Council by imagining the consequences if the city of Charlotte were to approve similar regulations. If the city of Charlotte instituted the same regulations, writes Portillo, it "would effectively exclude most of the new apartments under construction...except for uptown high rises built with concrete and steel."

Tuesday, August 23, 2016 in Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Aeriel view of white sheep grazing on green grass between rows of solar panels.

Coming Soon to Ohio: The Largest Agrivoltaic Farm in the US

The ambitious 6,000-acre project will combine an 800-watt solar farm with crop and livestock production.

April 24, 2024 - Columbus Dispatch

Large blank mall building with only two cars in large parking lot.

Pennsylvania Mall Conversion Bill Passes House

If passed, the bill would promote the adaptive reuse of defunct commercial buildings.

April 18, 2024 - Central Penn Business Journal

Workers putting down asphalt on road.

U.S. Supreme Court: California's Impact Fees May Violate Takings Clause

A California property owner took El Dorado County to state court after paying a traffic impact fee he felt was exorbitant. He lost in trial court, appellate court, and the California Supreme Court denied review. Then the U.S. Supreme Court acted.

April 18, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

Divvy Chicago

Divvy Introduces E-Bike Charging Docks

New, circular docks let e-bikes charge at stations, eliminating the need for frequent battery swaps.

49 minutes ago - Streetsblog Chicago

Freeway sign with "severe weather - use caution" over multilane freeway in rainy weather.

How Freeway Projects Impact Climate Resilience

In addition to displacement and public health impacts, highway expansions can also make communities less resilient to flooding and other climate-related disasters.

1 hour ago - Transportation for America

Wind turbines and solar panels against a backdrop of mountains in the Mojave Desert near Palm Springs, California

California Grid Runs on 100% Renewable Energy for Over 9 Hours

The state’s energy grid was entirely powered by clean energy for some portion of the day on 37 out of the last 45 days.

April 24 - Fast Company

News from HUD User

HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research

Call for Speakers

Mpact Transit + Community

New Updates on PD&R Edge

HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research

Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools

This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.

Planning for Universal Design

Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.