A Comparison of the Sustainability of Wood and Bamboo as a Structural Material
Description
With a rapidly decreasing amount of resources for construction, wood and bamboo have been suggested as renewable materials for increased use in the future to attain sustainability. Through a literature review, bamboo and wood growth, manufacturing and structural attributes were compared and then scored in a weighted matrix to determine the option that shows the higher rate of sustainability. In regards to the growth phase, which includes water usage, land usage, growth time, bamboo and wood showed similar characteristics overall, with wood scoring 1.11% higher than bamboo. Manufacturing, which captures the extraction and milling processes, is experiencing use of wood at levels four times those of bamboo, as bamboo production has not reached the efficiency of wood within the United States. Structural use proved to display bamboo’s power, as it scored 30% higher than wood. Overall, bamboo received a score 15% greater than that of wood, identifying this fast growing plant as the comparatively more sustainable construction material.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2019-05
Agent
- Author (aut): Thies, Jett Martin
- Thesis director: Ward, Kristen
- Committee member: Halden, Rolf
- Contributor (ctb): Industrial, Systems & Operations Engineering Prgm
- Contributor (ctb): Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Eng Program
- Contributor (ctb): Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Eng Program
- Contributor (ctb): Barrett, The Honors College