Mass Timber Gets The Nod For University Of Idaho’s New Basketball Arena
The momentum for mass timber continues to gain strength and speed, with last week’s announcement that the University of Idaho will build its new $30 million basketball arena from wood. Why? Because Idaho wants, and needs, to stand out from its recruiting season competitors – and the new basketball arena might do the trick.
“It ties in with our land grant mission. It ties in with the timber industry. It ties in with our need for a facility. This is really resonating with people,” UI Athletic Director Rob Spear told the Spokesman-Review’s Peter Harriman.
“As the UI works through the transition that will see it return to the Big Sky Conference as a football-playing member in 2018 after two decades as an NCAA Football Bowl Series school, the new arena is a bold statement UI athletics are not simply retrenching,” Harriman explained.
The arena’s basketball court will hold 4,500 to 4,700 spectators, and its practice gym is spacious, as are coaches’ offices and convention spaces. Fundraising for the building is 67 percent complete.
The mass timber dome – a replacement for Idaho’s long-serving Kibbie Dome – is set to open in 2020. Opsis Architecture of Portland, Ore., will design the structure. The firm’s initial architectural drawings are stunning. Once again, mass timber proves itself to be a warm and inviting, but also exceedingly durable, building material.
From Treesource: treesource.org.
Latest News
Housing Helps U.S. Hardwood Lumber Sales Improve Faster Than Exports
While U.S. hardwood exports lagged in May and June 2015, domestic demand for hardwood lumber continued to improve. Home construction, which dipped in May, was set to move higher, as both permitting and builder confidence…
B.C.’s Forest Products Industry Restructures For Expected Recovery
A trend whereby B.C. forest products companies have been snapping up sawmills south of the border while shuttering plants here is likely to continue. That prediction, from a new Conference Board report, is part of…
Northwest Sawmills Struggle To Break Even With Thinning On Public Lands
The Finnish hew saw at Duane Vaagen’s mill can make two two-by-fours from a tree no thicker than a loaf of bread. “The magic,” he says, as logs rattle by and emerge seconds later as…
Find Us On Social
Newsletter
The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.
Subscribe/Renew
Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.
Advertise
Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.