architectural plywood must perform. In Basalt, nestled along the Frying Pan River at nearly 6,600 feet, the thin mountain air and dramatic humidity swings between winter and summer test every bond line, every veneer joint, every finish coat in ways that Louisville's temperate Ohio Valley climate never could. Rosebud's panels shipped into this corridor—whether sequenced walnut for a ski lodge great room or rift white oak lining a contemporary Roaring Fork Valley residence—carry the same precision layup and balanced construction that left the Louisville facility, but they arrive engineered to hold true where lesser panels would check, warp, or delaminate under the stress of alpine conditions. That resilience becomes even more critical as the material continues its reach southward into warmer, more humid markets like Baton Rouge, where moisture poses a different but equally unforgiving challenge to