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Mass Timber Schools

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A New Standard for School Construction in Washington

There are already over 30 schools, facility expansions and projects using mass timber in Washington state. From portables in Toppenish to a large elementary and middle school in Seattle, school districts all over the state are choosing mass timber. It doesn't matter if you're a large district like Seattle or a small, rural district in La Push, mass timber has advantages over traditional steel and concrete construction. We are here to help connect you with resources to explore if mass timber could be the right choice for your district.

For the wellbeing of students, teachers, and administrators across Washington, we are working to establish mass timber as a primary choice for K-12 school construction in Washington and nationally. This accelerator is designed to: (1) enable school districts in Washington, and nationally, to confidently say yes to building new facilities with mass timber, and (2) reduce friction during the project delivery process.

Our Vision

50 school districts committing to mass timber by 2028, and 50 new mass timber school projects underway by 2038.

Healthier, Higher Performing, and Faster with Mass Timber

Health & Performance

What environment optimizes cognitive function (learning, memory, emotion, communication, and social intelligence) in a child? With Americans spending more than 90% of our time indoors, and children spending the majority of their waking hours in school, it is vital that our educational facilities support health, wellbeing and performance. We know that our environment directly impacts our health, that the presence of wood helps reduce stress, blood pressure and heart rate and allows for more creativity and productivity. (Mass Timber Schools: Wellness in Wood - Mithun)

Economic Advantage

Buildings constructed with prefabricated mass timber structures save 20-30% in overall construction schedule compared to steel and concrete construction. In some cases, the use of mass timber has allowed districts to move into a new building a full year earlier than originally anticipated, or to deliver on a tight schedule. Sourcing mass timber from local PNW manufacturers avoids tariffs associated with other systems that are manufactured internationally.

Once occupied, the new mass timber building offers superior energy efficiency, as solid timber construction provides thermal insulation, keeping conditioned air inside.

Forest Ecosystem Health

Central and Eastern WA have millions of acres needing treatment to reduce wildfire risk and improve forest structure, and mass timber creates markets for restoration thinning of small & over-dense stands. When there’s a paying outlet for small-diameter logs (e.g., mass timber products such as CLT/GLT), more acres are treated, exactly what Washington’s 20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan calls for. (20-Year Forest Health Strategic Plan: Central and Eastern Washington | Department of Natural Resources)

Rural Economic Development

Mass timber manufacturing in rural communities such as Colville, the Spokane Valley, and Port Angeles creates good paying, quality jobs that support the local economy. Mass timber plants bring capital investment in rural areas (mill retrofits, fabrication shops, shipping/rail infrastructure), and contribute to property and sales taxes that support schools, fire districts, and local services.

When mass timber is produced using small-diameter logs from Washington’s forests, forest restoration becomes financially sustainable, keeping more forestry and land management dollars in rural communities rather than relying only on state/federal subsidies.

Examples of Washington's mass timber schools:

MASSTAC Schools CTA

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School Districts

Do you represent a school district in Washington that is planning to refurbish, expand, or build new educational facilities in the next five to ten years?

Our team is here to support you on that journey, from master planning to operation.

In this project, we will distill lessons learned from mass timber school projects across the region, highlight best practices and resources to support school districts in decision making, and create a toolkit that will give you the confidence to build your next facility with mass timber.

If you would like to schedule a meeting with our Mass Timber Schools expert committee, please contact us at erica@wamasstimber.org.

This project is funded by the US Forest Service, through a Wood Innovation Grant.

Washington School for the Deaf. Design by Mithun. Photo by Lara Swimmer/Esto.

Thank you to our Funding Partners

Coughlin Porter Lundeen
PCS Structural Solutions
Port Blakely
Swinerton
StructureCraft
Timberlab
PNW Ironworkers District Council
Holmes US
Perkins&Will
Seattle Office of Economic Development
Craft Contracting
Washington State Department of Commerce