Joe Kannapell, PE

Home Building Technology, Part XV: The Rebirth of Wood

Joe Kannapell, PE

Wood was not held in high regard in the truss drafting department where I began working. Our fabricator customers often wanted their trusses designed with “old lumber,” meaning the obsolete size of 1-5/8” x 3-5/8”, even though the 1.5” x 3.5” size had been in...

#18320 Cover image
March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 10
Paragon Team

A Small Booth in a Big Industry: Why Exhibit?

Paragon Team

In the middle of the largest residential construction show in the world, wedged between estimating software and the kitchen and bath aisle, our small booth was focused on one question: where do structural components truly fit in the future of homebuilding? The International Builders Show...

#18320 Cover image
March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 58
Joe Kannapell, PE

Home Building Technology, Part XIII: Truss Equipment Proliferates – Component Saws

Joe Kannapell, PE

As housing demand accelerated in the 1960s, builders increasingly turned to trusses. But, lacking better equipment, truss shops had trouble scaling up to fill their orders. Early shops had little more than radial arm saws to cut members and wood tables to assemble them. They had exhausted every...

#18318 Cover image
January 2026
Issue #18318
Page 10
Joe Kannapell, PE

Home Building Technology, Part XII: Plate People Proliferate

Joe Kannapell, PE

A great American competitive struggle broke out in truss shops around Miami in 1957. The owners of these shops learned that two new plates had hit the market, and both worked without supplementary nailing. The Sanford Grip-Plate that they were using required hundreds of nails to be hammered into...

#17317 Cover image
December 2025
Issue #17317
Page 10
Joe Kannapell, PE

Home Building Technology, Part XI: Rapid Growth and Competition

Joe Kannapell, PE

The news of trusses being built with newfangled plates was so well received that it raced across the country in the late 1950s. The first to take notice were homebuilders who built with stick framing, who then wanted to try trusses. The first to respond were lumberyards, who were well positioned...

#17316 Cover image
November 2025
Issue #17316
Page 10
Anna Stamm

Looking Toward the Future with Safe Arbor at BCMC

Anna Stamm

We all know that the Building Component Manufacturers Conference (BCMC) is THE place to go when you want to see the latest and greatest from suppliers to the structural building components industry. Now that BCMC has been combined with the annual Framer’s Summit, the resulting BCMC | FS...

#17316 Cover image
November 2025
Issue #17316
Page 84
Joe Kannapell, PE

The Last Word: Housing and Components on the National Mall

Joe Kannapell, PE

Our industry has much to gain from our participation in the Innovative Housing Showcase in Washington, D.C. This year, one of our main goals was to lobby government officials to stimulate housing construction. In effect, the 27 exhibitors were saying right in front of the seat of government,...

#17315 Cover image
October 2025
Issue #17315
Page 170
Joe Kannapell, PE

Wall Panel Technology, Part V: Whole House Evolution

Joe Kannapell, PE

The dream of having a single person model an entire structure was admirable, but developing the software to do that turned into a decade-long struggle. Five years ago, I chronicled the development saga in my series on Fifty Years of Truss Design, Parts XI – XV. As the story told, the...

#16301 Cover image
August 2024
Issue #16301
Page 10
Joe Kannapell, PE

Wall Panel Technology, Part IV: Software Evolution

Joe Kannapell, PE

The creation of wall panel software is like the creation of all software – experienced insiders do it best. That was true with Gang-Nail’s AutoPan in the 1970s, which Joe Cotton developed while building wall panels for his homebuilding business. It was also the case with Ted...

#16300 Cover image
July 2024
Issue #16300
Page 10
Craig Webb

Paddling Hard But Moving Slow: Increasingly, That’s LBM’s Outlook for the Rest of 2024

Craig Webb

After years in which dealers struggled from crisis to crisis, a slew of public reports and economic indicators suggest we can expect many more months of muddling along. Our surfing metaphor of two years ago has given way to the paddleboard, where the only way to speed up is to paddle...

#16300 Cover image
July 2024
Issue #16300
Page 98
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