Can A Sustainable Industry Be Built From An Invasive Species?
A landmark project on the UH Manoa campus shows the albizia trees potential as a building material and the challenges of developing manufacturing in Hawaii.
When Joey Valenti built his dome-shaped tiny house on University Avenue a year ago, it was designed in part to rebut skeptics who said albizia wood was too light and weak to use as a building material.
Valenti proved the skeptics wrong with his celebrated, striking structure. He also raised another, bigger question: Why couldnt Hawaii harvest and process albizia as a building material?
The answers highlight many of the problems associated with growing the manufacturing sector in Hawaii.
Even with an abundant raw material like albizia an invasive species that needs to be removed growing a manufacturing sector in Hawaii can be daunting. Shipping costs, labor, the need for capital investments, a relatively small and uncertain local demand: all of these pose obstacles to starting something new.
Read more:
https://www.civilbeat.org/2019/04/can-a-sustainable-industry-be-built-from-an-invasive-species/
Joey Valentis Albizia Project on the University of Hawaii campus shows the invasive wood can be used as a building material.