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American white oak deck features in the USA pavilion at ‘Milan Expo 2015’

 
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8 Jun 2015

In line with the overall theme of the Milan Expo 2015 - ‘Feed the Planet, Energy for Life’ - the USA Pavilion, named 'American Food 2.0, United to Feed the Planet' shows just how engaged the U.S. is in global food security, food innovation and has become a center for the best food on the planet. As such, the pavilion opens its airplane hangar sized door to the main pedestrian approach, like an invitation to enter, and is as open, airy and breezy as a building can be. The boardwalk (made of recycled lumber from America's boardwalks) rises to the second level, concealing a defined exhibition below and is the main forum for self-guided viewing.

American white oak deck features in the USA pavilion at ‘Milan Expo 2015’

In line with the overall theme of the Milan Expo 2015 - ‘Feed the Planet, Energy for Life’ - the USA Pavilion, named 'American Food 2.0, United to Feed the Planet' shows just how engaged the U.S. is in global food security, food innovation and has become a center for the best food on the planet. As such, the pavilion opens its airplane hangar sized door to the main pedestrian approach, like an invitation to enter, and is as open, airy and breezy as a building can be. The boardwalk (made of recycled lumber from America's boardwalks) rises to the second level, concealing a defined exhibition below and is the main forum for self-guided viewing.

According to Biber, the main architectural feature is a football-field-length Vertical Farm featuring a variety of harvestable crops in a vertical array. It is as though a typical horizontal field was rotated to become the side of a building. Biber reiterates that it is not a proposal for serious urban or vertical farming, which is usually indoors, but more of a didactic display talking about the past, present and future of the American farm, and the American diet. The pavilion itself then is a scaffolding for ideas, a rethinking of the nature of the Expo pavilion and of America as a force in the food world.

Finished with one coat of clear anti-oxidant oil, the white oak decking was manufactured in Italy by Imola Legno. Comprising profiled random length strips, 20mm in thickness and 80mm wide, the floor was laid using a hidden clip mounting system with 5mm gaps between each strip. Stainless steel fasteners were used and the decking can easily be taken up without damage either for routine maintenance or re-use, thus considerably extending its life expectancy. Although the USA Pavilion is a temporary exhibit, the deck is fixed with an innovative click system allowing it to be readily relocated, reused and maintained. It should last no less than 20 years and, with appropriate maintenance, for as long as 50 years.

The USA pavilion has a very strong sustainability theme featuring a vertical farm, the latest energy efficient technologies and reclaimed wood. But one of the strongest environmental messages is communicated through the use of the sustainably produced new American oak. AHEC, using its ground breaking Environmental Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) research, has produced a full cradle to grave environmental profile for the white oak deck. Data on the forestry, sawmilling, drying and shipping impacts of sending the white oak lumber to Italy were combined with data collected during manufacturing. Included in the assessment are all the non-wood materials (glues, oils and fixings) transport, installation and predicted life expectancy. At the end of its life the deck can either be recycled or burnt as a renewable fuel.

“The American white oak resource is not only renewable but is expanding. The resource is so large and growing so rapidly that it takes less than 25 seconds for the white oak harvested to manufacture the deck installed at the Milan Expo to be replaced in the forest. The deck is better than carbon neutral on a cradle-to-grave basis. The carbon emissions associated with delivery of materials and fabrication of the deck are more than offset by energy generated from wood offcuts and disposal at end of life. Much of the energy input for production of the deck derives from renewables. For as long as the deck remains in use it will store
the equivalent of 14.5 metric tons of CO2 equivalent,” concludes Roderick Wiles, AHEC Director for Africa, Middle East, South Asia and Oceania.



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