At 3daysofdesign 2026, AHEC’s immersive exhibition traced the journey of American hardwood from forest to finished product.
July 13th, 2026
Hardwood is most familiar to us in its finished form, as furniture, flooring, or interior finishes. While we often admire the finished product, less visible are the decades of planning and stewardship that make these materials possible.

That was the starting point for Wood for the Trees, an exhibition presented by the American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC) during 3daysofdesign 2026, Copenhagen’s annual design festival. Set within Material Matters at the historic waterfront Gammel Dok building in Christianshavn, the installation invited visitors into an abstract forest environment while tracing the journey of American hardwood from seed to finished product.

Created in collaboration with London-based design studio Mitre & Mondays and UK furniture maker Benchmark, the exhibition drew inspiration from AHEC’s documentary Forested Future and followed the life cycle of hardwood through five stages: Growth, Planning, Selection, Resilience, and Timber.

Visitors at the exhibition moved through an abstract woodland setting designed to bring that story to life. Rotating timber trunks displayed materials and objects, furniture referenced fallen logs, while suspended graphics evoked the forest canopy overhead. Audio-visual installations, environmental data, and narrative displays helped connect the journey of hardwood with the wider story of responsible forest management.

One takeaway stood out throughout the exhibition: forests operate on a very different timeline from design projects. While a product may take months to develop, forests take decades to grow and generations to manage. Responsible forestry requires patience, planning, and a long-term view.

The exhibition also highlighted a remarkable transformation. A century ago, the hardwood forests of the eastern United States had largely been reduced to what AHEC described as “stumps and ashes”. Today, they span more than 40 million acres and continue to grow at roughly twice the rate at which they are harvested. It is a powerful example of how long-term stewardship can support both forest health and the continued use of hardwood as a renewable material.

It also emphasised the importance of using a wider variety of timber species. Designers often stick to a small group of familiar woods, but American hardwood forests offer far more options, each with its own character and practical strengths. Exploring these alternatives can open up new creative possibilities, while also supporting healthier forest management. When there’s demand for a broader mix of timber, it can give landowners more reason to keep their forests intact over time.
In this sense, material choice becomes part of a larger environmental picture, linking responsible forestry, carbon storage, and long-term sustainability, with the decisions made in workshops, showrooms, and homes. As conversations around responsible design continue to evolve, AHEC’s Wood for the Trees offers a timely reminder that every material has a story. For American hardwood, that story begins in the forest, long before it reaches the workshop.
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