Sawmilling at scale: A different path forwardThursday 2 Apr 2026
Instead of expanding traditional mill layouts, the Sawbox integrates the entire log-to-lumber process into a compact system. Debarking, scanning, optimization, cutting, sorting, and stacking are combined into a continuous flow within a footprint of roughly 1,000–1,500 square meters. Achieving this required more than miniaturization; it demanded a complete rethinking of process interaction and system architecture. One of the central development challenges was maintaining cutting precision under high levels of automation. The system relies on real-time coordination between 3D log scanning, optimization software, and cutting units, such as chipper heads, band saw, and rip saws. These components execute decisions in a single pass. Without the buffer of multiple process stages, every component must perform consistently, even when handling mixed log qualities and diameters. This level of integration places particular emphasis on the reliability of automation. With the concept designed around centralized control, a single operator can oversee the entire process. For developers, this meant ensuring stable performance across all process steps, from infeed to robotic stacking, under real-world variability. This complexity is reflected in the development approach. The Sawbox was designed, manufactured, and tested in-house before being delivered to the first customer, which allowed engineers to refine the system's behavior under controlled conditions. Early results indicate yields of around 70–75%, suggesting that tightly integrated optimization can directly improve resource efficiency. The Sawbox's relevance becomes clearer when viewed through the lens of its intended users. Sawmills, lumber construction companies, wood processing businesses, forest cooperatives, and forest enterprises alike face a similar challenge: how to remain competitive without exceeding practical limits. In one early case, a customer was faced with a difficult decision: either close a small, long-established sawmill or invest in a new technology for the next generation. The Sawbox offered a third option: retaining local production while transitioning to a more automated, space-efficient model. Importantly, the concept is not designed to replace high-capacity industrial sawmills but rather to complement them in a different operational niche. By enabling companies to process their own logs, the Sawbox reduces their dependence on external suppliers and supports more localized, resilient production strategies. Thus, the Sawbox shifts the central question for the industry from how large a sawmill needs to be to how intelligently it can operate. More >> Source & image credit: Springer ![]() | ||
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