Largely used for for roofs and floors, mass timber applications are becoming more common in vertical elements too

Cross-laminated timber (CLT) is gaining increased use among architects and engineers due to its numerous structural applications in various building projects. While CLT panels are typically used for horizontal elements, such as roofs and floors, they are becoming increasingly common for vertical elements, including walls and cores. In other words, CLT applications are used for almost every project in the built environment.

CLT falls under the umbrella of mass timber, a category that also includes other panelized products such as mass plywood, as well as linear systems like nail-laminated timber (NLT) and dowel-laminated timber (DLT). While these products share similarities, CLT construction is distinctly different. In CLT, fabricators assemble wooden planks into rectangular panels consisting of several layers of dimensioned solid-sawn lumber or structural-composite lumber boards. These boards are stacked orthogonally in an alternating orientation and glued together on their broad faces. This orthogonal layering allows CLT to span bi-directionally within the plane—properties that make it one of the most versatile of the mass timber panel products.