Seven mass timber projects selected for climate innovation program

Heartwood residential project in Seattle in daytime, aerial view.
Heartwood, a Seattle residential project built in mass timber under Type-IV codes, by a team consisting of atelierjones. This project can serve as a model for residential projects chosen as part of NYCEDC’s Mass Timber Studio. Photos by Lara Swimmer/courtesy atelierjones.

NYC’s Mass Timber Studio, a climate innovation initiative by New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) and the Mayor’s Office of Climate and Environmental Justice, has chosen its inaugural teams.

The program is supported by the US Department of Agriculture Forest Service (USDA), Softwood Lumber Board (SLB), WoodWorks, NC Department of Buildings (DOB), and AIA New York (AIANY).

Each team has been awarded a $29,000 grant and will receive technical assistance from WoodWorks and advisory feedback from NYC DOB.

The projects are located across the five boroughs and include diverse building typologies, with six of the seven sites located in environmental justice communities. The project teams include:

  • Brooklyn Public Library, New Lots Branch—East New York, Brooklyn

This public project to replace the existing New Lots branch with a new library intends to use mass timber construction. The project team includes Brooklyn Public Library, MASS Design Group, Marble Fairbanks Architects, Envoie Projects, and TYLin | Silman Structural Solutions.

  • Hillside Avenue—Jamaica, Queens

This proposed 100 percent mixed-income affordable housing project features approximately 136 apartment units and ground-floor retail. The project team includes Curtis + Ginsberg Architects, MURAL Real Estate Partners, Buro Happold, and Rodney D. Gibble Consulting Engineers.

  • Hoek Place—Red Hook, Brooklyn

This five-story, multi-family, mixed-used building will feature community programming on the ground level. The project team includes Urban Terrains Lab, BLDGWorks, TYLin | Silman Structural Solutions, Element5, and Veneklasen Associates.

  • Mass Timber in Harlem—Harlem, Manhattan

This project evaluates the viability of converting an existing design of a six- or seven-story residential building from a concrete superstructure to a lower carbon mass timber superstructure. The project team includes atelierjones, Magna & York, Sage and Coombe, Swinerton, Timberlab, and DCI Engineers.

  • 1160 Flushing Avenue—Bushwick, Brooklyn

This mixed-use industrial development will function as a space for companies, entrepreneurs, and artisans and will help to preserve the manufacturing fabric of the local community. The project team includes DenCity Works Architecture and Totem.

  • The Grafted Home—Crown Heights, Brooklyn

This redevelopment of a three-story, multi-family, residential building evaluates adaptive reuse versus ground-up development using mass timber. The project team includes Algoma and Neighbor.

  • Walter Gladwin Recreation Center—Tremont, Bronx

A man sits in an open-air lobby of Heartwood, which utilizes mass timber in its structure.
An open air lobby in Heartwood showing the use of mass timber used in the structure of the building.

This public project to construct a new mass timber facility brings inclusive and universally accessible fitness amenities and programming for all ages to the Tremont community. The project team includes Marvel, TYLin | Silman Structural Solutions, NYC Department of Design and Construction (NYC DDC), and the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation (NYC Parks).

NYCEDC will be hosting public mid- and final-review events this year at the Center for Architecture. The mid-review event, during which teams will present their projects, will be held on April 29.

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