[[wiki-architecture]] · [[Building Materials]] · [[ARCHITECTURE]] · [[000]]
# Beaverboard
Beaverboard (also beaver board) is a fiberboard building material formed of wood fibre compressed into sheets. It was originally a trademark for a lumber product built up from the fibre of white spruce and made from 1906 until 1928 by the Beaver Manufacturing Company at their plant in Beaver Falls and marketed from their headquarters on Beaver Road, in Buffalo, New York.
Beaverboard has occasionally been used as a canvas by artists. The painting American Gothic (1930) by Grant Wood was painted on a beaverboard panel.
== See also ==
Paperboard
== References ==
- [[Wiki-Architecture/Infrastructure]]
- [[Professional Practice/Construction Management/Quality Control]]
- [[Professional Practice/Codes & Standards/National Building Code of India/Part 06 - Structural Design/Section 7A - Prefabricated Concrete]]
- [[Building Construction/Structural Systems/Concrete Structures]]
- [[History and Theory/World History/Classical Architecture]]
- [[Wiki-Architecture/Biographies]]
- [[Building Construction/Hill Architecture]]
- [[Professional Practice/Ethics and Professional Conduct]]
- [[Building Services/Building Systems]]
- [[Building Construction/Construction & Materials/Building Material/Polymers and Composites]]