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Sweden to Build World's Largest Wooden City

In an old industrial zone in Stockholm filled with former factory buildings and parking lots, developers are planning to build a 'wooden city' - the largest mass-timber development in the world, with 30 wood buildings spanning 25 blocks.


Illustration of Stockholm's planned wooden city
Credit: Atrium Ljungberg

“We want to show what is already possible today,” says Annica Ånäs, CEO of Atrium Ljungberg, the development company behind the project. Mass timber-panels and beams made from layers of wood stacked together for extra strength avoids the massive carbon footprint of standard construction materials like concrete and steel.


The number of buildings using the material is quickly growing, but projects typically happen one building at a time. Such as the 280-foot-tall Mjøstårnet tower (the world's tallest timber building) in neighbouring Norway. However, the Mjøstårnet tower will soon lose its title to a new plyscraper in Switzerland.


“Our core strategy is to develop large interconnected areas,” Ånäs says. “In this way, we can create places full of variety that people enjoy and where they want to be, as opposed to just setting up a single building.”


The development will include 7,000 new work-spaces and 2,000 new housing units, along with restaurants and stores. Areas nearby already have more housing than offices; by adding new workspace, the development can help shrink commutes.


A new subway line will be opened in the area, so it will also be a short train ride from the city centre. But by adding more to the immediate neighbourhood, the project aims to support the idea of the 15-minute city, where it’s possible to get everywhere you need to go on a typical day via a short walk or bike ride.


Construction is scheduled to start in 2025, with the first buildings completed in 2027.

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