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Using timber in construction
There are many uses for timber within the Queensland construction industry.
Queensland has a diverse timber and wood product processing and manufacturing sector that predominantly processes locally grown plantation softwoods, but also hardwoods and cypress softwood from native forests.
The sector, particularly the secondary processing sector, is also increasingly using imported sawn timber from overseas and interstate producers.
This guide provides information and resources about using wood in construction.
Using treated timber
The Australian Standard for using preservative-treated wood (AS 1604.1: Specification for preservative treatment - Sawn and round timber) provides the treatment specifications for wood that needs to be protected from insects, termites and decay. The specifications set out in the standard apply to all preserved wood, whether treated in Australia or imported from overseas. Standards Australia also publishes a guide to the standards series dealing with wood and wood preservation.
Why wood is treated with preservative chemicals
Wood is treated with preservatives to protect it against deterioration when used in conditions where threats exist. Sapwood is found just below the bark in all trees and has little resistance to decay, borers or termites. It doesn't contain the chemical deposits that give heartwood its natural durability.
In most wood types the sapwood can be impregnated with chemicals that provide resistance to the potential biological hazards of placing the wood into service. Appropriate preservatives and treatment processes must be used to ensure the chemicals penetrate effectively and are retained by the wood.
Hazard levels and their accepted uses
Wood is treated to different levels, depending on the hazards to which it will be exposed. The different in-service hazard conditions have been classified with a hazard (H) class. The treated wood is branded with the relevant H class.
The higher levels have greater protection and all classes are suitable for use in the conditions described in the lower levels.
H1 is
- suitable for use in well-ventilated places where the wood is kept off the ground and completely protected from weather and wetting
- designed to reduce the likelihood of attack by insects other than termites
H2 is
- suitable for use in well-ventilated places where the wood is kept off the ground and completely protected from weather and wetting
- designed to reduce the likelihood of attack by insects including termites
H3 is
- suitable for use where the wood is kept off the ground but exposed to weather or periodic wetting
- designed to reduce the likelihood of attack by insects (including termites) and decay
H4 is
- appropriate for use where the wood is in contact with the ground or is continually damp
- designed to reduce the likelihood of attack by insects (including termites) and severe decay where a critically important end-use is involved
H5 is
- appropriate for use where the wood is in contact with the ground or fresh water
- designed to reduce the likelihood of attack by insects (including termites) and very severe decay
H6 is
- appropriate for use where the wood is in prolonged contact with sea water
- designed to reduce the likelihood of attack by marine borer and very severe decay.
Preserving wood
There are a number of methods for preserving wood to meet the target hazard classes. The appropriate level of chemical penetration and retention (concentration) is specified for each hazard class, and it is the responsibility of the person treating the wood to ensure that the AS 1604 specifications are met.
The retention of preservative in the penetration zone must be appropriate for the chemical and the required H class, as set out in AS/NZ 1605.
Selling preservative-treated wood
Wood (or wood articles) offered for sale as 'preservative-treated' or 'immunised' should be preserved with a treatment specified in the Standard and branded with a registered brand (including the relevant H class).
Wood preservers should brand all wood treated in their plant before it leaves the site.
Buying preservative-treated wood
When buying preservative-treated wood from any source, ensure it is properly branded and the H level class indicated is appropriate for the intended use of the wood.
Branding and certification
To comply with the AS 1604 Standards, brands may be any shape but they must incorporate the following with letters and figures not less than 4mm high:
- treatment plant registration number
- preservative identification number
- H level class.
Wood pieces larger than 15mm thick must be branded with a hammer or burn brand, a stamp, or a sticker. For smaller sizes, the brand may be on a label attached to wood pieces, bundles or bundle wrappings, or it may be on the delivery docket.
Wood pieces that may be exempt from the branding requirements include battens, fence palings, pieces with a cross-section 1,500mm2 or less and pieces with a sawn thickness of less than 15mm.
Treatment certificates, where requested, should include:
- wood species and description
- hazard class
- preservative name
- penetration value
- retention value
- the wood preserver's name and identification number.
References
- Standards Australia (2005) AS 1604.1-2005. Specifications for preservative treatment - sawn and round timber. Australian Standard, distributed by SAI Global Limited.
- Standards Australia (2002) HB164-2002. Wood and wood preservation - A complete guide to the AS/NZS 1604 Standards series, distributed by SAI Global Limited.
Construction timbers and compliance
Queensland government provides the interactive web tool, QTimber (and associated publication, Construction timbers in Queensland (CTIQ)), to make it easier to use Queensland building timbers correctly and improve timber quality in service.
Both resources provide information on important wood properties you need consider when selecting timber for construction in Queensland. They also provide requirements and conditions of use, so you can determine the right 'design service life' for different construction applications in Queensland's climatic regions.
QTimber
QTimber is an interactive web tool that provides critical information about using the right timber for the right job, including:
- designing or building with timber in construction or engineering
- treating, importing or selling timber.
Timber construction regulations are related to geographical decay hazard zones and QTimber makes it easier to find timbers that are suited to your building application and location.
You can use QTimber to:
- find specifications for using construction timbers in Queensland
- select from a list of approved timbers relevant to the construction location and application
- find out if any conditional restrictions or preservative treatments that may apply to the construction project
- look up the wood properties (and use specifications) of any Australian-grown or imported timber
- find information about timber durability, design life applications, decay hazard zones, and more.
Construction timbers in Queensland (CTIQ)
The Construction timbers in Queensland publication sets out the conditions for using timbers in Queensland. QTimber is the new the digital version.
CTIQ describes the properties of timbers used in the construction of Class 1 to Class 10 buildings (e.g. houses, carports, garages, greenhouses and sheds), as well as those used for other purposes such as furniture, landscaping and outdoor structures (e.g. playgrounds, fences).
It's a primary reference document in the Queensland variations to the Building Code of Australia (BCA, Australian Building Codes Board) under the Queensland Building Act 1975.
The publication is made up of 2 books, also known as CTIQ 1 and 2:
CTIQ 1:
- provides definitions and descriptions of timber properties
- supports the information in CTIQ 2 by explaining
- design life
- building applications
- decay hazard zones.
CTIQ 2:
- provides reference tables for the properties
- proposes target design life
- outlines conditions for more than 600 timbers in more than 50 building applications across Queensland.
Processing timber
Cocowood processing manual
The Cocowood processing manual (PDF, 1.5MB) describes best practice for producing high-value flooring products from coconut wood or 'cocowood'. It meets international standards for flooring products and recognises the specific, local conditions of the Pacific Islands.
These technical guidelines are based on the research of the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) project: Improving value and marketability of coconut wood.
This manual is intended for operators skilled in timber processing who need to work with the unusual properties of cocowood. It specifies where cocowood processes differ from standard practice for timber. For other processes, refer to the relevant standards set by the importing country.
Using the manual
The manual is divided into 3 sections. Each section adds to different aspects of primary and secondary processing.
Section 1
- Overview of the best practice steps for harvesting and processing cocowood.
- Glossary of terms specifically associated with processing cocowood.
- Section on managing processing risks.
Section 2
- Cocowood's unique properties and how they relate to critical processing techniques.
- Processing methods in more detail with explanation of why these practices are essential.
Section 3
- More information, including:
- contacts
- current standards
- useful publications.
Manufacturing rotary veneer from small logs
This guide provides technical information about producing veneer from small logs, rotary peeling, veneer production, manufacturing, grading and protecting rotary-peeled veneer products. The guide draws on outcomes from several years of wood processing research with chapters covering:
- Manufacturing rotary veneer and veneer products – an overview
- Rotary-peeled products: advantages and uses
- Log specifications, grading and pre-processing
- Rotary peeling
- Veneer clipping and drying
- Veneer grading and upgrading
- Veneer quality control
- Veneer recovery
- Product manufacture
Read the guide to manufacturing rotary veneer and products from small logs.
© The State of Queensland 1995–2024
- Last reviewed: 08 Sep 2021
- Last updated: 08 Sep 2021