6 On Trend Details to Give your Home Exterior a Fresh Look by HOUZZ
Building a new home or updating your façade? Be inspired by these 6 ways to stylishly warm up the exterior with Accoya wood.
20.12.2021
So much attention is paid to the interiors of our homes, but the exterior is what makes the first impression. A beautifully designed façade enhances the architecture and sets the tone and feel of a home before guests even set foot inside. With its warm, natural appeal and virtually limitless design potential, wood cladding has emerged as a major trend in exteriors. Here are six of-the-moment ways to use it to give your property serious street appeal.
1. Opt for a Beautifully Weathered Façade
Embrace the natural look with untreated wood cladding that ages gracefully over time. It’s a wonderful way to highlight the earthy and organic beauty of the wood, and helps a home blend in with the landscape.
This stunning lakeside home in Saint Joseph, Michigan, called for a hardy wood cladding that could withstand the constant wind coming off Lake Michigan. Accoya cladding was chosen for its sustainability, durability and superior resistance to weather and rot. Leaving the wood untreated has allowed it to develop a stunning natural appearance that merges with the earthy, natural setting, while creating a pleasing contrast against the home’s sharp black window frames.
While standard wood cladding has its benefits, it’s not suitable for every project or homeowner, as it requires ongoing maintenance and can deteriorate over time. Today you’ll find innovative alternatives that provide all the warmth and natural appeal of wood, with minimal maintenance requirements and far superior durability. Accoya’s acetylated wood cladding can withstand even tough weather conditions, is resistant to rotting, and if left untreated will weather naturally to a beautiful silvery grey.
Accoya wood has impressive environmental credentials too. It’s fully sustainable, and every panel comes with FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) certification. It is also 100 percent nontoxic, so you can have peace of mind knowing it’s a healthy choice for you and your family.
2. Ditch the Trim
Want the focus to be on the shape and form of your architecture rather than individual features such as your windows? Extending your wood cladding right to the window ledges without including a trim, as seen on this home (Ash Tree Residence) in New Canaan, Connecticut, keeps all eyes firmly on the bigger picture while creating a sleek and modern look.
Here, Accoya cladding in Old Town Gray was used to add a modern-rustic feel to the home and highlight the dramatic shape of its gable-roofed entry volume. The large picture windows are trim-free and feature minimalist frames — a clever way to maximize light and views inside the home without overshadowing the bigger architectural story from the outside.
3. Try the Shou-Sugi-Ban Trend
If you’re looking to make a statement with a bold exterior, consider giving your home the shou-sugi-ban treatment. This ancient Japanese technique involves charring the wood to preserve and strengthen it. The charring turns the wood a deep charcoal black while revealing its texture and grain. Not only does this wood treatment make for a striking façade, but it minimizes maintenance.
4. Focus on Natural Materials
As the saying goes, less is more. Choosing one “hero” natural material and using it in different ways across your home’s exterior can be a subtle, but very effective, way to bring cohesion to your home’s design. To create an uninterrupted sense of flow, you could carry the material through to the interior of your home or to any outbuildings.
The key to success when using a single natural material is to be creative with how you apply it. This award-winning boathouse (The Haven) in Norfolk, England, has been given light-tone Accoya wood cladding, decking and curved screening. As the property is surrounded by water on three sides, the architects selected Accoya wood for its water-resistant properties and dimensional stability, as well as its stunning natural looks and sustainability. The result is a graceful home that sits lightly in its tranquil coastal setting.
5. Play Up Textures
Natural appeal aside, wood cladding gives you endlessly creative ways to express your personal style. Take this three-story office building designed and occupied by architectural firm Dillon Kyle Architects in Houston, for example. It’s clad in 2,500 Accoya boards that have an abstract leaf-like pattern carved into the wood. The pattern references the oak trees that line the neighbourhood, and it adds not just texture and softness to the modern structure but a unique personal touch.
“The Accoya wood boards are unsealed and allowed to weather over time,” says Peter Klein, associate principal architect at Dillon Kyle Architects. “The idea was to use a material where you couldn’t tell where the patterns started and stopped — just one big continuous object.”
As the wood cladding would play a pivotal role in the look and performance of the building, the firm took their time choosing the right one. “Even left untreated, it didn’t warp or mildew or mould, and that let us know we were on the right path,” Klein says. “The neutral grey tones coupled with its long-term durability, resistance to rot and insects made Accoya wood the ideal material for this project.”
6. Go Skinny
Add texture and depth to your home’s exterior with narrow boards for cladding, louvers and screening.
For this luxury apartment block (Blackwood Street Apts) in Melbourne, Australia, the architect specified 40-by-40-millimeter Accoya wood boards with a coat of Woca Exterior Walnut Oil for the louvers and screening in the alfresco areas. The oiled boards create a soft and inviting feel while bringing a sense of intimacy to the apartment complex.
The rest of the detailing in this spot, including hardware and pavers, was deliberately pared back to keep the focus firmly on the textural wood.
Running slender boards vertically, as the architect has done here, is a clever design technique for making a low roof or ceiling appear higher. You can use this strategy both outside your home with wood cladding and inside with wood wall lining.
If room height is not a concern, consider mixing vertical and horizontal patterns for added texture and interest inside or outside your home.
More: Learn more about Accoya’s range of sustainable, acetylated wood products by visiting our homepage here.
This story was written by the Houzz Sponsored Content team.
Project Collection now live on accoya.com
25.10.2021
Inspirational projects
The Accoya Project Collection provides an extensive look at some of the most inspirational uses of Accoya from around the Globe. From the stunning architectural design of Barangaroo House in Sydney, Australia to the glorious Banff Observation Deck in Canada.
You’ll find a range of projects showcasing the use of Accoya in Cladding, Decking and Windows & Doors.
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How architectural cladding can bring in an era of beautiful cities
Architectural cladding is the perfect way to change the look and feel of our urban spaces, bringing nature and sustainability together in our modern city design.
25.10.2021
At a time when vast numbers of people have been confined to cities and towns for extended periods of time, many of us have reassessed our relationship with the natural environment and recognised the benefits we feel from immersing ourselves in the great outdoors. Whilst some have been spurred on to consider lifelong moves to the countryside, most indulge only in temporary escapes, before having to return to urban life. But, what if we can permanently draw the beauty of nature into the fabric of our modern cities?
How have our modern exterior cladding ideas been shaped by the past?
Evidence as old as Anglo-Saxon Britain and 12th century Norway suggests that cladding design is not only confined to the modern age but has been seen to endure throughout hundreds of years. In the 16th century, ‘weatherboarding’ became a popular phenomenon, and in the late 18th century industrial timber production and new technologies popularised the combination of weatherboarding and timber frames. However, Victorian advancements in the production and transportation of brick meant that by the 20th century this had become the major building material and, since then, modernist preferences have moved largely towards the use of metal and glass.
Thankfully, the resurgence of timber cladding architecture now sees it juxtaposed with modern materials across the globe, undoubtedly prompted at least in part by strengthening environmental considerations. Facilitated by its incredible customisability it makes for the perfect mesh of fashionable design and sustainable cladding, allowing us to experience the beauty of nature without leaving the city.
Stunning exterior wood cladding ideas that unite sustainability and durability
Enfield home
This extension in a conservation area of north London is an eye-catching design that succeeds in both standing out itself and subtly enhancing the beauty of the existing brickwork. It does so by making use of three different grades of lightly charred Accoya, creating a sense of depth and sophistication whilst also showcasing the immense design flexibility of these materials. The owner of this stunning home addition can expect their natural oasis to stay pristine throughout their lifetime, and feel good that they’ve chosen a sustainable cladding option that is 100% non-toxic and contains no biocides or harmful chemicals.
Barangaroo House
A three-storey restaurant in Sydney’s CBD, was one of the first in the city to use Accoya wood cladding and is a remarkable example of why this natural look is an increasingly popular choice for the beautification of our cities. Nested amongst the modernist city architecture, it makes use of the distinctive Japanese charring technique, Shou Sugi Ban, to create a striking building that breathes life into the otherwise sterile landscape. The Barangaroo project is a globally renowned urban renewal project that has sustainability and well-being at its heart, so it is hard to think of a more fitting product for this than Accoya.
What’s more, is that Accoya is durable across the entire range of climates. Its use in Britain, as seen above in north London, proves a resilience in wet conditions, and Barangaroo House exemplifies its durability in Sydney’s hot and humid summers. This guaranteed sustainability means that not only will this striking example of wood cladding architecture makes this corner of the city more beautiful, it will do so for lifetimes to come.
The American School in The Hague
Yet another magnificent example of how subtly, yet effectively, wood cladding is able to draw nature into our cities. See how the metal and glass of this modern reconstruction of a 16th-century farmhouse blends so seamlessly into the surrounding trees, functioning as an extension of nature that brings a softness into the frame. This project not only uses Accoya wood for its cladding, but also for the windows, doors, and insides of the roof and substructure. Often considered to be the only truly sustainable building material, wood not only stores carbon, but increases the speed of construction, and improves both the physical and mental health of the workers themselves, as well as the building’s subsequent users. When combined with the environmentally focused mission of Accoya, it is not hard to understand wood’s returning popularity.
The brilliance of sustainable exterior cladding materials, such as those provided by Accoya, is their strength and flexibility on a number of levels, allowing for a unique and natural beauty that endures. The wide variety of configurations and finishes, as well as the ability to utilise these tools in any climate, means that we are able to bring little pieces of nature’s charm into our urban spaces wherever and however we please, and facilitate a connection which we are now all the more hankering after.
References:
- https://www.greenspec.co.uk/building-design/timber-cladding-history/
- https://www.bushburycladding.co.uk/blog/the-history-of-cladding/
- https://exterior.supplies/a-trichotomy-of-texture-as-accoya-charred-cladding-triumphs/
- https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2021/oct/14/skelleftea-swedish-plywood-eco-town-20-storey-wooden-skyscraper-worlds-tallest
- https://www.housebeautiful.com/uk/decorate/a21614875/wood-benefits-eco-material-home/
Where to Buy
You can buy Accoya and Accoya products from our selection of distributors or manufacturers in your region. Use our map search tool to find your nearest Accoya supplier.
10 Modern Wood Cladding Ideas
Options to set your home cladding ideas apart from the rest.
22.10.2020
Think of it as a good-looking coat.
The primary purpose of your home’s exterior cladding is to keep the weather out and protect your home from wind, rain, sleet and snow, heat and cold. But protection should still be attractive; your cladding can still look good whilst its benefits are working hard.
Performance criteria
Cladding performance is key. No one wants to wear a raincoat that leaks and your house is no different. Look for cladding with these six qualities:
- Beautiful – almost goes without saying
- Durable – it should last for decades
- Easy to maintain – no one wants to spend their time repainting and staining
- Resistant – able to stand up to rot, decay, and insect damage
- Dimensionally stable – won’t warp or twist
- Warranty – that will protect you for decades
It’s not easy to find a product that meets all these criteria, but one great option is Accoya. Accoya cladding provides sleek, modern protection.
Accoya is one of the hottest wood cladding products on the market. Made using natural wood, Accoya is FSC® certified, made from responsibly harvested wood. Accoya is also non-toxic and contains no harmful chemicals, which leaves your home feeling and looking good.
Home cladding ideas
10 Modern Exterior Wood Cladding Ideas Using Accoya
One of the beautiful things about modern architecture is that you don’t have to follow any rules.
1. Mix your cladding materials
Accoya cladding blends beautifully with other modern materials like concrete, stone and metal. And, because Accoya does not warp, cup or twist, your edges will always remain flat, smooth and true.
2. Go for the natural look, which has a definite modern vibe
Accoya can be left to weather naturally, leaving you with a lovely silver finish.
3. Or, use bold colors
Accoya readily accepts coatings like paint and stain. You can choose light or dark, white or black, and everything in between to coat your cladding.
4. Go exotic with Shou Sugi Ban
Shou Sugi Ban is a popular trend in wood cladding right now, particularly for modern home designs. This traditional Japanese technique of charring wood makes it more durable and gives the cladding a unique black color and burned texture for a long-lasting finish.
5. Vary the siding orientation
You can install your cladding vertically, horizontally, and even in patterns – all on the same home. And, because it is natural wood, Accoya is easy to work with.
6. Mix siding styles
The exciting part is that there are no rules. You can combine traditional narrow horizontal lap cladding mixed with wider vertical boards. Accoya comes in a variety of board widths, and it’s dimensionally stable, so joints stay smooth.
7. Mix textures
Most people underestimate the impact that texture can have on a home’s cladding. Mix rustic, natural wood with charred boards, smooth metal panels or stucco for a signature, modern vibe.
8. Vary dimension
Another technique is to create shadows by alternating board thicknesses. You can even put some boards flat and others on edge to create interesting shadows.
9. Mix things up at the ends
This technique, used instead of corner boards, leaves a decidedly modern feel.
10. Sharpen your corners
Accoya can be fabricated to create knife edges that will perform well and stay sharp over time.
The Sky’s the Limit
The beautiful thing is that there are no rules for modern home design. Accoya gives you the flexibility to do almost anything you want with your home’s exterior. You can be creative, but then you can sit back and relax, knowing that your home will be protected for decades while still looking good.
Projects
you may like
Jubilee Community Center
Texas, United States
Broadway Market
Baltimore, United States
Guinness Open Gate Brewery
Maryland, United States
Bethesda Residence
Washington DC, United States
Shou sugi ban Mistral Restaurant
Philadelphia, United States
Where to Buy
You can buy Accoya and Accoya products from our selection of distributors or manufacturers in your region. Use our map search tool to find your nearest Accoya supplier.
14 Stunning examples of exterior wooden cladding
Explore 14 stunning examples of exterior wooden cladding from building projects around the world, including hardwood cladding examples with imagery.
22.10.2018
Wooden cladding around the world
Over the past few years, sustainability has become an extremely important aspect of life, not only in construction but in the wider world too. Increasingly, as consumers, we are looking for ways of living and building that are sympathetic to the environment around us.
Of course, this drive towards sustainable living is fantastic, and has inspired the architectural minds among us to challenge the traditional perceptions of materials such as timber, creating complex, clever structures that have not previously been achieved.
To its core, timber is a truly remarkable natural material, providing both warmth and comfort, as well as a flourish of unique style and texture to exteriors, thoroughly encouraging innovation in design. Moreover, its outstanding thermal and sound insulation properties make timber ideal for both new build and renovation projects – it is no surprise, then, that exterior wooden cladding has become increasingly prevalent in architectural design.
Herein you will find 14 of our favourite examples of how stunning wooden exterior cladding has been used to create beautiful, sustainable projects all over the world.
The Simple One
Set in the Norwegian village of Nerskogen, this unique cabin truly makes the most of views towards the nearby lake and mountain range through large, angled windows. Designed by Bergersen Arkitekter, the cabin blends into its surroundings with dark timber siding and a turfed roof and references the traditional Norwegian gapahuk, a simple structure that can be erected easily by hikers to provide shelter from harsh weather. The functional build provides a perfect, warm hideaway with a dramatic view to boot.
The Hot One
Milan-based studio Small Architecture Workshop avoided any damage to the shoreline of this Swedish lake, building this floating sauna completely on the water and really connecting the charred-timber build to its landscape. Searching for this element of connection, the architects used the traditional Japanese technique of Yakisuki, whereby the larch cladding was burnt to oxidate it making it resistant to weather and parasites. The sauna exists to increase the range of services provided for tourists who visit the bed & breakfast located just three hours from Stockholm.
The Airy One
When AR Design Studio were approached to extend a client’s cliff top holiday home, they couldn’t have imagined how complex the build would be. Half way through the planning process, the existing house broke in half during a landslip. After a full redesign, this complex idea of movement and fracturing remains integral to the concept, with engineering failsafes preventing future landslip-inflicted damage. Large windows flood the property with natural light all round, whilst the weathered, exterior timber cladding gives a natural feel.
The Luxurious One
This build uses the very same Blackbutt timber both inside and out, with the material being used for the external timber cladding, decking, screening, internal flooring, and door frames. The owner – and designer – David Groom even used the timber for bespoke kitchen cabinets and a large one of a kind dining table. Throughout the property light strips are used to highlight the natural complexity of the timber and external up-lighting makes it the central focus twenty-four hours a day.
Perth Home, Australia Image © Serena Pearce/ Code Lime Photography
The Expansive One
The Venlo City Hall demonstrates one of the most paramount example of Cradle to Cradle design principles in this list, boasting the highest possible application level of C2C Accoya materials within the fixed budget. Applications included the external wood cladding, timber decking and Accoya wood windows. It will generate a staggering return investment of over €17million within the next 40 years.
The Nature-Lovers One
At the tip of Askøy – a low-lying island in Hordaland county, off Norway’s west coast – Lars J Berge has created a tranquil, accessible hide for the country’s avid birdwatchers. Herdla Birdwatching Tower provides panoramic views across the open grasslands, shallow sea and freshwater ponds that act as an important location for migrating and breeding birds. Connecting with a series of newly installed paths, the wooden clad hide allows enthusiasts to experience the landscape and its inhabitants in a whole new way.
The Functional One
The Eneco Boiler House stands to prove that functionality can also be impressive. The entire construction, which serves more than 1,800 private and 20 business customers, is covered with uncoated Accoya timber cladding. Awarded 3rd prize in the Non-Residential Building Category at the Amstelveen 2017 Architectural Prize, the judging panel commented that it is “a building with an intriguing shape, in which a ‘wooden skin’ has been drawn over a pragmatic technical interior”.
Accoya Project – Eneco Boiler House, Netherlands Image © Ronald Schouten
The Modular One
Led by Slovenian firm OFIS Arhitekti, a highly skilled team of architects and engineers have designed and built a modular house that is suitable for a variety of locations, climates and terrains. In addition to being striking, the concept is both flexible and adaptable using many different, sustainable cladding materials. It can also be laid out in different combinations, both vertically and horizontally depending on the landscape that surrounds it.
The Angular One
Looking as though it grows out of the earth at an angle, the concept for this unique Danish residence arose from the restrictions placed by very strict planning authorities. When Architects MLRP were told that only one and a half floors and a gabled roof would be permitted, they had to be very creative and turned to Accoya® wood cladding. The resulting property interprets the Danish building tradition in a radical new way and ensures a visual contact between land and sea.
The Geometric One
Brunswick’s RMIT University houses one of the largest textile, clothing, leather and footwear programs in Australia, so it was only right that the exterior cladding mirrored the creativity of its internal activities. In addition to being creative, the building is also very clever: H2o Architects worked closely with European timber façade researches to develop an environmentally responsive method of construction to regulate internal heat transfer and thus, in the middle of Australia, the building needs only to be partially air-conditioned.
The Spacious One
This design was completed by the team at Julie Firkin Architects and is clad entirely by Silvertop Ash Timber, to provide great emphasis on natural textures and supreme versatility of the material. The light tones help to bounce and reflect light throughout the build, providing an extremely capacious and connected home.
The Sweeping One
Camillo Botticini Architetto selected Accoya specially to fulfil the owner’s prerequisite for a fully eco-friendly property. The expansive build combines Accoya’s durable cladding with large windows, flooding the residence with natural light whilst protecting from the elements, nestled into the Alpine hilltop around it and at one with the environment.
The Forest One
Peruvian architecture firm Llama Urban Design have truly connected this building with nature, even connecting nature itself. The wooden home connects two sides of a tree-covered valley in Ontario, forming a bridge over the valley below and providing incredible views out over the forest. Inside, a minimalist design puts the focus on the breath-taking environment that surrounds it.
Where to Buy
You can buy Accoya and Accoya products from our selection of distributors or manufacturers in your region. Use our map search tool to find your nearest Accoya supplier.
14 Stunning examples of exterior wooden cladding
Explore 14 stunning examples of exterior wooden cladding from building projects around the world, including hardwood cladding examples with imagery.
07.07.2018
Wooden cladding around the world
Over the past few years, sustainability has become an extremely important aspect of life, not only in construction but in the wider world too. Increasingly, as consumers, we are looking for ways of living and building that are sympathetic to the environment around us.
Of course, this drive towards sustainable living is fantastic, and has inspired the architectural minds among us to challenge the traditional perceptions of materials such as timber, creating complex, clever structures that have not previously been achieved.
To its core, timber is a truly remarkable natural material, providing both warmth and comfort, as well as a flourish of unique style and texture to exteriors, thoroughly encouraging innovation in design. Moreover, its outstanding thermal and sound insulation properties make timber ideal for both new build and renovation projects – it is no surprise, then, that exterior wooden cladding has become increasingly prevalent in architectural design.
Herein you will find 14 of our favourite examples of how stunning wooden exterior cladding has been used to create beautiful, sustainable projects all over the world.
The Simple One
Set in the Norwegian village of Nerskogen, this unique cabin truly makes the most of views towards the nearby lake and mountain range through large, angled windows. Designed by Bergersen Arkitekter, the cabin blends into its surroundings with dark timber siding and a turfed roof and references the traditional Norwegian gapahuk, a simple structure that can be erected easily by hikers to provide shelter from harsh weather. The functional build provides a perfect, warm hideaway with a dramatic view to boot.
The Hot One
Milan-based studio Small Architecture Workshop avoided any damage to the shoreline of this Swedish lake, building this floating sauna completely on the water and really connecting the charred-timber build to its landscape. Searching for this element of connection, the architects used the traditional Japanese technique of Yakisuki, whereby the larch cladding was burnt to oxidate it making it resistant to weather and parasites. The sauna exists to increase the range of services provided for tourists who visit the bed & breakfast located just three hours from Stockholm.
TASHJIAN BEE POLLINATOR CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
The university was interested in creating an architectural language that spoke to the idea of a farmstead but didn’t directly recreate the barn structure.“Using a modernized wood, material was a priority from a sustainability aspect,” said Chris Wingate, LEED AP and associate at MSR Design.
Accoya® wood was the ideal choice as it is the is one of the few building products to have acquired Cradle to CradleSM Certification at the elusive C2C Gold Level, and a C2C Platinum Level recognition for the most important C2C sustainable category; Material Health. All of the exterior cladding is Accoya® wood, both charred and stained. The charred Accoya® wood was completed by Delta Millworks based in Austin, Texas.
Discover more about this project here.
The Luxurious One
This build uses the very same Blackbutt timber both inside and out, with the material being used for the external timber cladding, decking, screening, internal flooring, and door frames. The owner – and designer – David Groom even used the timber for bespoke kitchen cabinets and a large one of a kind dining table. Throughout the property light strips are used to highlight the natural complexity of the timber and external up-lighting makes it the central focus twenty-four hours a day.
Perth Home, Australia Image © Serena Pearce/ Code Lime Photography
The Expansive One
The Venlo City Hall demonstrates one of the most paramount example of Cradle to Cradle design principles in this list, boasting the highest possible application level of C2C Accoya materials within the fixed budget. Applications included the external wood cladding, timber decking and Accoya wood windows. It will generate a staggering return investment of over €17million within the next 40 years.
The Nature-Lovers One
At the tip of Askøy – a low-lying island in Hordaland county, off Norway’s west coast – Lars J Berge has created a tranquil, accessible hide for the country’s avid birdwatchers. Herdla Birdwatching Tower provides panoramic views across the open grasslands, shallow sea and freshwater ponds that act as an important location for migrating and breeding birds. Connecting with a series of newly installed paths, the wooden clad hide allows enthusiasts to experience the landscape and its inhabitants in a whole new way.
The Functional One
The Eneco Boiler House stands to prove that functionality can also be impressive. The entire construction, which serves more than 1,800 private and 20 business customers, is covered with uncoated Accoya timber cladding. Awarded 3rd prize in the Non-Residential Building Category at the Amstelveen 2017 Architectural Prize, the judging panel commented that it is “a building with an intriguing shape, in which a ‘wooden skin’ has been drawn over a pragmatic technical interior”.
Accoya Project – Eneco Boiler House, Netherlands Image © Ronald Schouten
The Modular One
Led by Slovenian firm OFIS Arhitekti, a highly skilled team of architects and engineers have designed and built a modular house that is suitable for a variety of locations, climates and terrains. In addition to being striking, the concept is both flexible and adaptable using many different, sustainable cladding materials. It can also be laid out in different combinations, both vertically and horizontally depending on the landscape that surrounds it.
The Angular One
Looking as though it grows out of the earth at an angle, the concept for this unique Danish residence arose from the restrictions placed by very strict planning authorities. When Architects MLRP were told that only one and a half floors and a gabled roof would be permitted, they had to be very creative and turned to Accoya® wood cladding. The resulting property interprets the Danish building tradition in a radical new way and ensures a visual contact between land and sea.
Where to Buy
You can buy Accoya and Accoya products from our selection of distributors or manufacturers in your region. Use our map search tool to find your nearest Accoya supplier.
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