Narrative review of cultivation and material properties of European grown bamboo
摘要
Bamboo is increasingly recognised as a renewable, high-performance material with strong potential for structural and industrial applications. Although widely utilised in Asia, Africa and South America, its cultivation and structural use in Europe remain at an early stage; however, several emerging plantations and research initiatives indicate growing interest and promising starting points for future development. This narrative review synthesises approximately 70 research studies and related sources published between the early 1980s and 2025 to provide a European perspective on cultivation conditions, plantation development, and structural performance. Climatic conditions strongly influence growth rates, culm morphology, and resulting mechanical properties. Only a limited number of documented plantations currently exist in Europe that are oriented towards industrial or structural applications, and the available material data remain fragmented. Mechanical data reported in the literature are heterogeneous and derived from different testing approaches, which limits direct comparability. This heterogeneity is also related to the inherent geometric variability of bamboo culms. Studies on European-grown bamboo indicate that variations in culm geometry can influence load-bearing behaviour and contribute to variability in mechanical test results. Species such as Phyllostachys edulis, P. bambusoides, and P. viridiglaucescens can adapt to favourable European climates, showing densities and strength-to-weight ratios consistent with structural use, although culm dimensions are generally smaller than those of many tropical species. Mechanical properties (compressive, tensile, and flexural) typically fall within the lower-to-mid ranges reported for tropical bamboo. However, the dataset remains limited and not fully comparable. Key challenges include durability under European climatic conditions, standardisation of testing protocols, and integration into design frameworks. Despite these limitations, the available results and ongoing developments suggest that European-grown bamboo represents a promising material for future structural and industrial applications, provided that further research and standardisation efforts are undertaken.