Home » Planet Ark celebrates the West Australian Wood Encouragement Policy*

Planet Ark celebrates the West Australian Wood Encouragement Policy*

In July 2019 Planet Ark’s Make It Wood campaign celebrated the introduction of a Wood Encouragement Policy (WEP) for Western Australia after playing a key role in the policy’s adoption.

The Western Australian state government has now joined Tasmania to become the second state government in Australia to adopt a state-wide WEP.

The Make It Wood campaign aims to encourage the increased use of responsibly sourced wood as a building material.

A key part of this initiative is the promotion and advocacy of WEPs throughout Australia, which encourage the use of responsibly sourced wood in construction.

A WEP generally requires responsibly sourced wood to be considered, where feasible, as a key construction material in all civic new-build and refurbishment projects.

The adoption of similar policies around the world is growing steadily, including Canada, Japan, France, Finland, Netherlands and the United Kingdom, who are all encouraging the use of natural, timber-based products as a sustainable construction material. 

Responsibly sourced, certified wood is the only major building material that helps tackle climate change.

It’s renewable – ‘The Ultimate Renewable’ – it stores carbon for the life of the building, and it has much lower embodied energy than conventional, more carbon-intensive building materials.

As well as the environmental benefits of sustainable timber, the use of wood in the interior of a building has clear physiological and psychological benefits that mimic the effect of spending time outside in nature.

The Pingelly Recreational and Cultural Centre in Western Australia is a great example of the use of wood in civic construction.

The centre, which is Western Australia’s largest timber building constructed since then end of the second world war, is the social and sporting hub of the Shire of Pingelly and the surrounding communities.

Located 200 km south-east of Perth in the Western Australian wheat belt, the building was designed for long term sustainability for a community with scarce resources.

Pingelly is a small town with around 1000 inhabitants which has all the problems of similar areas with ageing population and diminishing employment.

Sport has traditionally been important in both the white and Aboriginal communities.

The new sports centre is a Shire initiative, responding to popular demand.

Four pavilions with a function centre with bar, a sports hall with change rooms, a gym and storage spaces are linked together by a verandah facing east towards the already established sports fields.

The verandah forms a welcoming “breezeway”, tempering the hot climate.

All visible surfaces are of prefabricated Eucalyptus wood, locally grown and processed in thick sections to stand the harsh climate.

*Copy supplied by Planet Ark

Digital Editions


  • Creating long-term employment pathways

    Creating long-term employment pathways

    The Shire of Carnarvon is creating long-term employment pathways and strengthening workforce capability through its participation in the Remote Jobs and Economic Development (RJED) Program,…

More News

  • Toolkit provides resources for staff to live values

    Toolkit provides resources for staff to live values

    Organisational values are at the core of every workday and task and Bundaberg Regional Council has developed a practical tool kit to support its workforce and promote its values. The…

  • New system for Blacktown

    New system for Blacktown

    Blacktown City Council has launched DAISY, a new digital planning assistant designed to help residents better understand planning requirements and prepare residential development applications. DAISY, which stands for Development Application…

  • NSW mourns long-serving Governor

    NSW mourns long-serving Governor

    On behalf of the family of Dame Marie Bashir, I am saddened to share the news of her passing. Married to Sir Nicholas Shehadie AC OBE for 61 years, and…

  • Jack Iori honored by the Hills.

    Jack Iori honored by the Hills.

    The Hills Shire Council has officially named the grandstand at Kellyville Memorial Park Community Centre the Jack Iori Grandstand, recognising the enormous impact Jack Iori OAM has had on rugby…

  • Farmers urged to register for rural aid

    Farmers urged to register for rural aid

    Farmers across Australia – particularly those in disaster-impacted regions – have been strongly encouraged to register with Rural Aid now, as ongoing natural disasters and worsening weather conditions continue to…

  • Coonabarabran VIC punches above it’s weight

    Coonabarabran VIC punches above it’s weight

    Warrumbungle Shire Council has welcomed new data confirming the Coonabarabran Visitor Information Centre as one of the top three performing Visitor Information Centres in New South Wales. Official figures released…

  • Storm-proofing Seymour River Bridge is long overdue

    Storm-proofing Seymour River Bridge is long overdue

    If I had a dollar for every time I saw the question, “Is the Seymour River Bridge open?” on social media, the upgrade to that stretch of road might already…

  • Newcastle Lord Mayor resigns

    Newcastle Lord Mayor resigns

    Newcastle Lord Mayor Cr Ross Kerridge resigned from his role as Lord Mayor of Newcastle in early February. The Lord Mayor wrote to City of Newcastle CEO Jeremy Bath to…

  • Unwavering support and thanks in Bondi aftermath

    Unwavering support and thanks in Bondi aftermath

    Councils across NSW are being encouraged to continue to provide direct support for the Waverley community in the wake of December’s devastating terrorist attack at Bondi while Waverley has paid…

  • Redlands Koala population stable

    Redlands Koala population stable

    Redland City Council has become the first local government in south-east Queensland – and within the koala’s federally-listed northern endangered range – to report stabilisation of its city-wide koala population.…