Girl Scout Camp Lakota
Frazier Park, CA-
Bldg system
Mass Timber
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No. Of Stories
1
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Sq. Meters
1,655
Architects of Camp Lakota, a 57-acre getaway for the Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles, took a fresh approach to traditional A-frame timber design. The dining hall and six restroom buildings were built with light-frame wood construction, and glulam beams were used to create the dining hall’s expansive open space. Each of the 24 cabins was efficiently assembled from a flat-packed kit that included a type of cross-laminated timber (CLT) made from structural composite lumber and wood structural insulated panels (SIPs). Prefabrication simplified material transport and reduced on-site construction waste; crews were able to assemble up to a cabin a day. The cabins are elevated above ground on the CLT panels, which helped meet wildfire requirements. The decision to use mass timber also provided a 29 percent reduction in embodied carbon over the concrete slab-on-grade alternative. Designers focused on minimizing energy use in this remote location, in part through their choice of CLT and SIPs.
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Construction Type:
V-B
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Building Type:
Assembly (Worship, Restaurant, Theater)
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Material Types:
Mass Timber, Cross-Laminated Timber (CLT)
Companies Involved:
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Perkins & Will
Architect
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illig Construction Company
General Contractor
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Durst Builders, Inc
Installer Framer
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Freres Engineered Wood
Timber Supplier
Individuals Involved:
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Ashley Stoner
Project Architect
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Salvador Dorado
Structural Engineer