Building Sustainable Schools – Entry Period Now Open
The entry period for the 2025 Mass Timber Competition: Building Sustainable Schools opened on October 28, 2024.
This year’s competition will award funds totaling $1.8 million to support projects that accelerate the pace of mass timber adoption in the United States, specifically in the K-12 learning environment.
Eligible projects must be located within the United States and be a K-12 educational project including, but not limited to, classrooms, libraries, athletic facilities, offices, resource centers, portable classrooms, daycare facilities, and vocational centers.
Eligible applicants include for-profit building organizations registered in the U.S. including architects, engineers, owners, general contractors, and manufacturers; not-for-profit organizations incorporated as a not-for-profit corporation or society formed in the U.S. such as trusts, religious bodies, and associations; U.S. local government entities such as public school districts, cities, counties, and states; and Native American tribal governments and organizations. If you would like to submit a project, start by downloading the Request for Proposals (RFP) document which contains all the information needed for a qualifying entry. The entry process requires the completion of the online form linked below before the deadline on Monday, January 13, 2025 at 11:59pm ET.
Deadlines – Today’s Date is
Submission entry period begins
Competition Q&A webinar (see below)
Submission entry period ends
Judging concludes
Public announcement
Monday, October 28, 2024
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Monday, January 13, 2025 at 11:59pm ET
Friday, May 30, 2025
Week of June 4, 2025
Have Questions? Join the Q&A Webinar
The competition funders conducted a live Q&A webinar on November 20, 2024 to answer questions from project teams that have entered or are considering entry. To access the recorded webinar, click here. To access the slide deck from the webinar, click here. You can also access resources from WoodWorks on wood and education projects by clicking here.
Building to Net-Zero Carbon
This competition program selected several winners in 2022 and 2023.
Designed to expand the use of mass timber in the United States, the 2022 and 2023 Mass Timber Competition: Building to Net-Zero Carbon programs awarded several projects that highlight mass timber’s application, practicality, commercial viability, and ability to reduce the carbon footprint of the built environment. The Competition is intended to help expand the use of mass timber building solutions and support increased employment in advanced wood products design, engineering, construction, supply chain, and manufacturing sectors.
The SLB and USDA fund the competition. The funding supports costs associated with the use of mass timber or mass timber hybrid building systems and construction. Funding also helps project teams overcome barriers to the use of a new building material and system, most notably the costs of analyzing design and engineering alternatives and verifying that these solutions comply with applicable code(s).
Recent Updates
- Evergreen Charter School: Construction is underway and anticipated to be completed by the end of 2024. The project team will then undertake a biophilia study to assess the positive impact of exposed wood on occupants.
- Return to Form: A Comparative Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) study of the project was the first in a series examining the embodied carbon, speed, and cost of mass timber versus other building systems. The study compares Return to Form, a 12-story, 84-unit residential building designed with mass timber, to functionally equivalent cold-formed steel (CFS) and concrete alternatives. Construction is expected to begin in the Spring of 2025.
- Up@310 Lofts: To celebrate the start of construction, the team held a “hat tipping” ceremony in March, tipping the team’s hard hats to the supporters who made the project a success. In addition to the celebratory ceremony, architect Randall Walter, Principal of Lignin Group, spoke in an SLB-sponsored webinar about mass timber overbuild projects. Construction is expected to end in April 2025.
2023 Competition Recap
In October 2023, the SLB and USDA Forest Service announced five winners of the 2023 Mass Timber Competition. The winning projects received funds totaling $2.2 million to demonstrate mass timber’s applications in architectural design and highlight its significant role in reducing the carbon footprint of the built environment. A blog post profiling the five winners can be found on Think Wood.
CODA Detroit
A 95,000-square-foot, five-story mixed-use residential project.
Detroit, Michigan
Project Team: OOMBRA Architects, Brush Park Properties / IN Development Partners, JDH Engineering, Britt Peters and Associates, and AM Higley.
Update: Project is in Development and Planning Phase
Up@310 Lofts
An overbuild that will add three stories and 57 apartments on top of a steel building.
Keene, New Hampshire
Project Team: Lignin Group, Tim Olson, Banwell Architects, 310 Marlboro St., and Entuitive.
Update: Under construction and to be completed in April 2025
Via/NWA IC Program
A pilot housing project, consisting of four market-rate and affordable multifamily residential buildings totaling 131 units.
Springdale, Arkansas
Project Team: A226, Blue Crane, Modus Studio, Tatum-Smith-Welcher, Aspect Structural Engineers, and Arco Construction.
Update: Project is expected to break ground in the Spring of 2025
The Village SF Wellness Center
A six-story, 45,000-square-foot mixed-use commercial and multifamily project with the goal to reclaim physical and cultural space for urban American Indians.
San Francisco, California
Project Team: PYATOK architecture + urban design, The Friendship House Association of American Indians, DCI Engineers, and Cahill Contractors.
Update: Project is in Development and Planning Phase
Woolsey Gardens
An eight-story, 59,570-square-foot high-rise multifamily project with commercial space on the first floor and a permanently affordable housing community above.
Berkeley, California
Project Team: Solomon Cordwell Buenz, Northern California Land Trust, Tipping Structural Engineers, Swinerton Builders, and Timberlab.
Update: Project is in Development and Planning Phase
INTRO Atlanta
A 17-story mass timber tower above a 4-story (above ground) concrete podium. Commercial and mixed use building with 314 residential units.
Atlanta, Georgia
Project team: Harbor Bay Real Estate Advisors, Hartshorne Plunkard Architects, and Forefront Structural Engineers.
Update: Project was awarded in 2024 and is in Design Phase
2022 Competition Recap and Project Updates
In June 2022, the SLB and USDA Forest Service announced the winners of the first competition. Six projects were chosen for their ability to demonstrate mass timber’s innovative, scalable applications in architectural design and to highlight its significant role in reducing the built environment’s carbon footprint. The winning projects, which shared $2 million in total funding, are listed below. A blog post profiling the winners can be found on Think Wood.
Return to Form
12-story multifamily and retail project in Denver, Colorado, which will include affordable housing units.
Denver, Colorado
Project team: Katz Development, Timberlab, KL&A Engineers and Builders, and Tres Birds
Update: Project team completed a whole-building life cycle analysis (WBLCA), construction to begin in the Spring of 2025
Evergreen Charter School
An 85,000-square-foot gymnasium.
Hempstead, New York
Project team: Martin Hopp Architect, Consigli, and Odeh Engineers
Update: Under construction and to be completed in December 2024
INTRO Cleveland — Phase 2
A multifamily high-rise building in downtown Cleveland, Ohio.
Cleveland, Ohio
Project team: Harbor Bay Real Estate Advisors, Hartshorne Plunkard Architecture, and Forefront Structural Engineers.
Update: Project expects to begin construction in the Spring of 2025
Each project pledges to use wood sourced from sustainably managed forests, and many prioritize mass timber that is both domestically harvested and manufactured. Lessons from these projects will be shared with the broader design and construction communities to support project development and replication, including research about cost analyses and life-cycle assessments.