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Fighting for wood before America’s building code authorities

The American Wood Council’s engineers and experts work exclusively to maintain and expand market opportunities for wood through building codes and standards in the face of stiff competition from competing materials such as concrete and steel.

No single company can represent the broad industry before building code authorities, nor maintain the technical expertise required to engage full-time with the leading construction code-writing bodies — but AWC can and does.

Over the past year, AWC’s advocacy has:

  • Protected wood panels’ dominant place in the residential sheathing market against efforts to impose unsubstantiated energy requirements that would have favored foam sheathing;
  • Defeated effort by steel interests to grab market share by creating lower energy-efficiency requirements for steel studs than for wood studs;
  • Promoted use of I-joists and trusses in residential construction by defeating proposals that would have imposed additional, unsubstantiated requirements on engineered wood products than competing materials
Building Codes and Standards

For AWC to continue to advocate for the industry, it needs broad industry participation and the resources that come with it. In 2010, specific challenges include:

  • Building Codes: ICC code cycle for the new 2012 code is underway and will include over 2,000 proposed code changes;
  • Earthquake Codes: Efforts are underway to have wood derated for residential construction in earthquake-prone areas, sought to be replaced by steel;
  • Energy Efficiency: Recapturing markets lost to energy performance requirements biased toward competing materials and increasing regulation resulting from new energy legislation;
  • Fire Safety: Educating the fire community on the safety and performance of all wood products, and responding to the current fire service focus on engineered wood products;
  • Structural Specifications: Opposing substitution of wood structural panels with foam sheathing and preventing technically unjustified changes to the IRC’s bracing code.

Recent News

Deck Guide Updated to 2009 IRC | New Errata for 2005 Wood Design Package

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