► WoodSolutions Webinar | Using Cross Laminated Timber in Residential Construction

Start/End Date
22 Sep 2020 11:00am
Location
Online
Cost
FREE

There is a massive interest at present by building professionals in Cross Laminated Timber (CLT), a new state-of-the-art engineered timber product. Whilst its recent take-up has predominately been in mid-rise commercial office buildings and apartments it is also a highly versatile, sustainable, renewable and thermally efficient building product for residential applications. Tyson Infanti, XLam Contracts Manager will discuss the opportunities in utilising CLT in residential projects, particularly and importantly the key design and specification requirements, and he will feature and discuss a number of recent exemplary residential projects constructed using CLT.


By registering for this free WoodSolutions webinar you agree to having your details added to the WoodSolutions database. They will not be sold or shared with any other organisation. You can read the WoodSolutions privacy policy here: https://www.woodsolutions.com.au/page/privacy-policy.

After you have been added to the WoodSolutions database, you will receive an email asking you to confirm your registration and set a password. Should you wish, you can opt out at this stage.

As a registered user you will be able to download WoodSolutions technical design guides, fire test reports, other publications, view recordings of past webinars, listen to Timber Talks podcasts and submit Expert Advice questions.

 

Speakers

photo of Tyson Infanti

Tyson Infanti

Contracts Manager @XLam

Tyson Infanti, is Contracts Manager at XLam – a role that sees him involved in all aspects of a new CLT project - assisting technically through the design, planning, shop drawings and manufacturing stages, then acting as the point of contact at XLam once a project goes live, and leading the team on-site to ensure the installation is run safely and smoothly.

 

 

 

 

 

Are you looking for a supplier?

Start Your Search

Social Media Feeds