Technological wood is a new decorative material made primarily from veneers of common fast-growing species, using a process involving veneer coloring, lamination, and molding. It mimics the texture and color of natural precious wood species, retaining their inherent properties of temperature and humidity regulation, heat insulation, and insulation. While still wood, it also avoids the inherent defects of natural wood, such as knots, wormholes, color variations, and decay, during processing. Modification effectively addresses the cracking and deformation issues inherent in natural wood. It can be said to be "derived from nature, yet superior to nature."
High-tech wood is the use of economic plantation wood to replace natural precious tree species wood. Therefore, it is an effective protection of natural rare resources and an active practitioner of the sustainable development strategy.
Characteristics of technological wood
Technological wood is the perfect combination of nature and modern high technology. It is taken from nature and is essentially wood. Compared with natural original ecological wood, technological wood has the following five characteristics:
1. Rich and colorful colors;
2. Diverse textures and colors;
3. Minor natural defects in wood;
4. The decorative surface is large in size and has high utilization rate;
5. Better mechanical properties.
The industry influence of high-tech wood
In just a few years, Techwood has surpassed its counterparts in Italy, the birthplace of Techwood, to become a new generation leader in Techwood. Its product quality, variety, color, and production and sales scale are already at the global forefront.
Over the past decade, over 1,200 varieties and designs have been introduced to the market. Many of these newly developed products have been widely used in furniture production and hotel interior decoration, sparking emulation by competitors and becoming a trendsetter in the technical wood industry. Strong R&D capabilities have made technical wood popular in the US market, leading the market share and earning the "American Product Innovation Award."
Since 2004, high-tech wood has been exported internationally, reaching over 50 countries around the world, including Europe, America, and Southeast Asia. In China, a dedicated network of high-tech wood retailers has been established in major furniture production hubs such as Guangdong, Shanghai, Beijing, Zhejiang, and Sichuan. The network is rapidly expanding to economically developed regions and large and medium-sized cities such as Qingdao, Dalian, Xiamen, Wuhan, Chongqing, Zhengzhou, and Xi'an. Each new market expansion and establishment of a new outlet attracts competitors, fueling the company's continued growth.

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