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Floorplan of the Gerrit Rietveld Academie.

byproduct, wood, plant, ma001

Bark

A stack of bark sitting on the yard of Stadshout's sawmill.

Bark is neglected in typical timber production. It is split from the logs using a long sharp tool and manual force.

The bark is central to the spread of the Dutch Elm Disease. The disease is a fungus carried by beetles that lay eggs in the cambium, the layer located between the bark and the wood.

To stop the spread of the disease, the sawmill must follow strict protocols, the bark is destroyed as soon as it is removed.

When the bark is stripped away, bugs and larvae that fall out feed the chickens roaming the plot of the sawmill.

Author(s)

Márk Redele, Cassiopée Charles-Messance, Catalin Trifan, Lulu Lund, Shauna Jin, Sangjun Lee, Inga Baedeker, Frederikke Falbe-Hansen, Florian Sigl, Daan Tillie, Amelia Urdaneta Uribe, Sara Lipužič

Location

Sawmill, Stadshout

References

  1. Stadshout Amsterdam, Stadshout sawmill, Rondehoep West 25, 1191 KK Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, Netherlands, accessed February 25, 2026, https://stadshout.nu/.

Related materials

Last updated

3 weeks ago

Media

A stack of bark removed from a large, presumably poplar tree. The barks are stacked in layers with thin sticks of wood keeping distance between the layers. A stack of bark removed from a large, presumably poplar tree. The barks are stacked in layers with thin sticks of wood keeping distance between the layers.