• The building was assembled four storeys at a time, with a total of five construction stages. Mjøstårnet was built without external scaffolding.
  • Mjøstårnet is a modern mixed-use tower, with facilities that the residents, locals, and visitors can exploit. The tower consists of 18 stories with different programs.
  • Mjøstårnet is a wood hybrid building in Norway, IT was finished in 2019. ... Mjøstårnet was designed by Norwegian studio Voll Arkitekter for AB Invest.
  • Mjøstårnet (85.4 m) is officially the world’s tallest timber building.
  • Built using CLT panels, Mjøstårnet, completed in March 2019 is the tallest wood building in the world. This 18-storey mixed-use building stands at 85.4 metres…
  • Mjøstårnet is to be a symbol of the “green shift”, and a proof that tall buildings can be built using local resources, local suppliers and sustainable wooden materials.
  • For Mjøstårnet, we have a main load-bearing in timber with some of the decks in concrete in the upper levels, resting on the timber structure.
  • Rune Abrahamsen, Moelven Limtre AS, CTBUH Chairman Steve Watts, Partner, alinea Consulting and Arthur Buchardt, AB Invest stand in front of Mjøstårnet...
  • Mjøstårnet er et samarbeidsprosjekt som er utviklet av Arthur Buchardt (AB Invest AS), Voll Arkitekter, Hent AS og Moelven Limtre AS.
    50 bin görüntüleme
    Yayınlandı15 Şub 2019
  • During his three years with Sweco Norway, Hjalte was involved in the fire protection of Mjøstårnet: “Mjøstårnet has been exemplarily fireproofed.
  • Mjøstårnet is an assembly of seven hundred large members of Glulam, which is an integral part of the building's timber construction.
  • Wood has different features than traditional materials used in such structures, and it therefore required the use of steel in order to realize Mjøstårnet.
  • Brumunddal's proximity to a major forestry and wood processing hub meant that the materials for Mjøstårnet were sourced from nearby spruce and pine forests.