Futureproof: Engineered Forests of the Future

Future Narrative

I suppose they have a beauty all their own, but it has taken a while to get used to them. These square and rectangular-column trees were introduced in Sweden about a decade ago to maximize sustainable forest output. Their shape has been bioengineered to maximize transport efficiency and reduce the milling needed to produce core hardwood lumber products. While there is a quarantine on squared trees, and their use is currently limited to Sweden, Finland, and Norway, one wonders if that will last.

Columnar trees increase the volume of usable hardwood forest material

A mixed load of squared and rectangular trees maximizes the loadout of autonomous logging rigs.

Autonomous logging rig scans products for flaws and then begins the wood curing process while en route to mill.


Technology

While trees vary dramatically from fruits, selective seeding of a few engineered forests has resulted in the growth of square and rectangular columnar trees. Favored by today’s largest furniture manufacturers, the new bioengineered Squared Timber™ line of lumber products increases the usable hardwood of a log by as much as twenty-seven percent.

Implications

How far are we prepared to go to optimize the natural world around us for our needs, and what could the unintended consequences of such actions be?

Related Concepts and Research

Here's what fruits and vegetables looked like before we domesticated them


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.