SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment No.  )

Filed by the Registrant [x]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]
Check the appropriate box:
[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement          [ ] Confidential, for Use of
[x] Definitive Proxy Statement                 the Commission Only (as
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials            permitted by
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to            Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
            Section 240.14a-11(c)
            or Section 240.14a-12

                         Louisiana-Pacific Corporation
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                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

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[LOGO] Louisiana-Pacific Corporation                         Proxy Statement and
       805 S.W. Broadway                               Notice to Stockholders of
       Portland, Oregon  97205                                    Annual Meeting
       (503) 821-5100                                                May 6, 2002



                                                                  March 25, 2002


Dear Stockholder:

         On behalf of the Board of Directors,  I cordially  invite you to attend
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Louisiana-Pacific Corporation. The meeting
will be held on Monday,  May 6, 2002, at 9:30 a.m. at the Portland Marriott City
Center,  520 S.W.  Broadway,  Portland,  Oregon.  I look  forward to  personally
greeting those stockholders able to be present.

         At this year's meeting, in addition to the election of three directors,
you will be asked to vote upon LP's 1997  incentive  stock award plan as amended
and the approval of  performance  goals under LP's annual cash  incentive  award
plan. Action will also be taken on any other matters that are properly presented
at the meeting.

         Regardless  of the number of shares you own, it is important  that they
be  represented  and voted at the  meeting  whether  or not you plan to  attend.
Accordingly,  you are requested to sign,  date,  and mail the enclosed  proxy at
your earliest convenience.

         The accompanying proxy statement  contains important  information about
the annual  meeting and your  corporation.  On behalf of the Board of Directors,
thank you for your continued interest and support.

Sincerely,


/s/ Mark A. Suwyn


Mark A. Suwyn
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

         On written request, LP will provide, without charge, a copy of its Form
10-K Annual Report for 2001 filed with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission
(including the financial  statements and a list briefly  describing the exhibits
thereto) to any record holder or beneficial  owner of LP's common stock on March
8,  2002,  the record  date for the 2002  Annual  Meeting,  or to any person who
subsequently  becomes such a record holder or beneficial owner. The reports will
be available for mailing in April 2002.  Requests should be sent to: Director of
Corporate Affairs,  Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation, 805 S.W. Broadway, Portland,
Oregon 97205.
                                                                            Page
                                                                            ----
Voting Procedure...............................................................2
Item 1--Election of Directors..................................................2
         Nominees..............................................................2
         Continuing Directors..................................................3
         Board and Committee Meetings..........................................4
         Executive Committee...................................................4
         Finance and Audit Committee...........................................4
         Compensation Committee--Interlocks and Insider Participation..........5
         Environmental Affairs Committee.......................................5
         Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee; Nominations
         for Director..........................................................5
Item 2 - Amendment of the 1997 Incentive Stock Award Plan......................6
         Background............................................................6
         Description of the Stock Award Plan...................................7
         Administration........................................................7
         Types of Awards Permitted.............................................7
         Certain Adjustments; Tax Consequences.................................9
         Awards................................................................9
         Stockholder Approval.................................................10
Item 3 - Reapproval of Performance Goals Under Annual Cash Incentive
         Award Plan...........................................................11
         Background...........................................................11
         Description of Performance Goals.....................................11
         Awards...............................................................11
         Stockholder Approval.................................................12
Other Business................................................................13
Finance and Audit Committee Report............................................13
Holders of Common Stock.......................................................14
         Five Percent Beneficial Owners.......................................14
         Directors and Executive Officers.....................................14
Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance.......................15
Executive Compensation........................................................15
         Compensation Committee Report........................................15
         Performance Graph....................................................19
         Compensation of Executive Officers...................................20
         Retirement Benefits..................................................22
         Management Loans and Other Transactions..............................24
         Directors' Compensation..............................................25
         Agreements with Executive Officers...................................26
Stockholder Proposals.........................................................28
Relationship with Independent Public Accountants..............................28
General  .....................................................................29
1997 INCENTIVE STOCK AWARD PLAN AS AMENDED...................................A-1
FINANCE AND AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER..........................................B-1

                                      -i-



[LOGO] LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION

805 S.W. Broadway
Portland, Oregon 97205
(503) 821-5100

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                                   May 6, 2002


         The Annual Meeting of  Stockholders  of  Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation
("LP") will be held at the Portland  Marriott  City Center,  520 S.W.  Broadway,
Portland,  Oregon, on Monday,  May 6, 2002, at 9:30 a.m. local time, to consider
and vote upon the following matters:

     1.       Election of three Class II directors.

     2.       Approval of the 1997 Incentive Stock Award Plan as amended.

     3.       Reapproval of performance goals under LP's Annual Cash Incentive
              Award Plan.

         Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on March 8, 2002,
are entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting.

         In  accordance  with  the  General  Corporation  Law  of the  State  of
Delaware, a complete list of the holders of record of LP's Common Stock entitled
to vote at the meeting will be open to  examination,  during  ordinary  business
hours, at LP's headquarters located at 805 S.W. Broadway,  Portland, Oregon, for
the 10 days preceding the meeting, by any LP stockholder for any purpose germane
to the meeting.

         Admission  to  the  meeting  will  be by  ticket  only.  If  you  are a
stockholder of record and plan to attend,  the Admission  Ticket attached to the
proxy card will admit you to the meeting.  If you are a stockholder whose shares
are  held  through  an  intermediary  such as a bank or  broker  and you plan to
attend, you may request an Admission Ticket by sending a written request,  along
with proof of  ownership,  such as a bank or  brokerage  account  statement,  to
Stockholder Relations, 805 S.W. Broadway, Portland, Oregon 97205.

                                                    ANTON C. KIRCHHOF, Secretary


Portland, Oregon
March 25, 2002







   Whether or not you expect to attend the meeting, please sign and date the
 enclosed proxy and return it promptly in order that your stock may be voted in
accordance with the terms of the Proxy Statement. If you attend the meeting,
                you may withdraw your proxy and vote in person.



                                 PROXY STATEMENT

         Louisiana-Pacific   Corporation,  a  Delaware  corporation  ("LP"),  is
soliciting  proxies on behalf of its Board of  Directors to be voted at the 2002
Annual Meeting of Stockholders  (including any adjournment of the meeting). This
proxy  statement  and the  accompanying  proxy  card  are  first  being  sent to
stockholders on approximately March 25, 2002.

                                VOTING PROCEDURE

         A proxy card is enclosed  for your use. To vote by proxy,  please sign,
date,  and  return  the proxy  card  promptly.  For your  convenience,  a return
envelope is enclosed, which requires no postage if mailed in the United States.

         You may  indicate  your  voting  instructions  on the proxy card in the
spaces provided.  Properly completed proxies will be voted as instructed. If you
return a proxy without indicating voting instructions, your shares will be voted
in accordance with the  recommendations of the Board of Directors--FOR  Items 1,
2, and 3 listed in the Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

         If you return a proxy  card,  you may revoke it (1) by filing  either a
written  notice of  revocation  or a properly  signed proxy bearing a later date
with the  Secretary  of LP at any time before the  meeting,  or (2) by voting in
person at the annual meeting.

         If you participate in the Automatic Dividend  Reinvestment Plan offered
by EquiServe  Trust  Company,  N.A., all the shares held for your account in the
plan will be voted in the same manner as shares you vote by proxy. If you do not
vote by  proxy,  the  shares  held for your  account  under the plan will not be
voted.

         Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on March 8, 2002,
are entitled to receive notice of the annual meeting and to vote at the meeting.
At the record date, there were 104,568,415  shares of common stock, $1 par value
("Common Stock") outstanding. Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote
on each matter to be acted upon. A majority of the outstanding  shares of Common
Stock   represented  at  the  meeting  will  constitute  a  quorum.   Additional
information  concerning  holders of outstanding  Common Stock may be found under
the heading "Holders of Common Stock" below.

         The Board of Directors has adopted a  confidential  voting policy which
provides that the voting instructions of stockholders are not to be disclosed to
LP except (a) in the case of communications intended for management,  (b) in the
event of certain  contested  matters,  or (c) as required by law.  Votes will be
tabulated by  independent  tabulators  and summaries of the  tabulation  will be
provided to management.

                       ITEM 1--ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

Nominees

         The three  nominees for the Class II director  positions to be voted on
at the  meeting are  presently  members of the Board of  Directors.  The term of
office for the  positions  to be voted on will  expire at the Annual  Meeting of
Stockholders in 2005. The nominees are:

E. GARY COOK                                      NOMINEE FOR TERM EXPIRING 2005

         E. Gary Cook,  age 57,  became a director of LP in June 2000.  Mr. Cook
was Chairman,  President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Witco  Corporation,  a
global specialty chemicals company, until his retirement in 1999. Until 1996, he
was President, Chief Operating Officer, and a director of Albemarle Corporation,
a global specialty  chemicals  company spun off from Ethyl  Corporation in 1994,
where  Mr.  Cook had been a Senior  Vice  President  and  director  since  1992.
Previously,  Mr.  Cook  was a Vice  President  of E. I. du Pont de  Nemours  and
Company.  He is also a director of  Trimeris  Corporation,  a  biopharmaceutical
company.

                                       -2-


PAUL W. HANSEN                                    NOMINEE FOR TERM EXPIRING 2005

         Paul W. Hansen,  age 50, has been a director of LP since February 1999.
Mr.  Hansen has been  Executive  Director of the Izaak Walton  League of America
(the "IWLA"), a nationally-recognized  conservation organization, since February
1995.  Mr.  Hansen  began his  employment  with the IWLA in 1982 as an Acid Rain
Project  Coordinator  and  served  in  various  positions  thereafter,  becoming
Associate Executive Director in 1994.

BRENDA J. LAUDERBACK                              NOMINEE FOR TERM EXPIRING 2005

         Brenda J.  Lauderback,  age 51,  was  elected  as a  director  of LP in
September  1999.  She was Group  President,  Wholesale and Retail,  of Nine West
Group Inc., a designer and marketer of quality, fashionable women's footwear and
accessories,  from May 1995 until her retirement in January 1998. Ms. Lauderback
previously served as President of the Wholesale Division at U.S. Shoe Corp. from
1993 to 1995.  She is also a director of  Consolidated  Stores  Corporation  and
Irwin Financial Corporation.

         YOUR SHARES REPRESENTED BY A PROPERLY COMPLETED AND RETURNED PROXY CARD
WILL BE VOTED FOR THE ELECTION OF THE THREE NOMINEES UNLESS AUTHORITY TO VOTE IS
WITHHELD.  If any of the  nominees  becomes  unavailable  to serve (which is not
anticipated),  your proxy will be voted for a substitute  nominee  designated by
the Board of Directors.

         The three nominees  receiving the highest total number of votes will be
elected.  Shares  not voted  for the  election  of  directors,  whether  because
authority  to vote is  withheld,  because  the record  holder  fails to return a
proxy,  because  the broker  holding  the shares  does not vote on such issue or
otherwise,  will not count in  determining  the  total  number of votes for each
nominee.

Continuing Directors

         The  current  members of the Board of  Directors  whose terms of office
will continue beyond the 2002 Annual Meeting of Stockholders are as follows:

ARCHIE W. DUNHAM                                       CURRENT TERM EXPIRES 2003

         Archie  W.  Dunham,  age 63,  became a  director  of LP in 1996.  He is
Chairman,  President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Conoco Inc., an integrated
global energy company.  He has served in various senior executive positions with
Conoco  Inc.  for more than five years.  Mr.  Dunham is also a director of Union
Pacific Corporation and Phelps Dodge Corporation.

MARK A. SUWYN                                          CURRENT TERM EXPIRES 2003

         Mark A. Suwyn,  age 59, became Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer of
LP and was elected to its Board of  Directors  in January  1996.  Mr.  Suwyn was
Executive Vice President of International  Paper Company from 1992 through 1995.
Previously,  he was  Senior  Vice  President  of E. I. du  Pont de  Nemours  and
Company.

WILLIAM C. BROOKS                                      CURRENT TERM EXPIRES 2004

         William C. Brooks,  age 68, became a director of LP in 1996. Mr. Brooks
has been  Chairman  of United  American  Healthcare  Corporation,  a  healthcare
management  company,  since 1998. He served as Vice  President of General Motors
Corporation  until his  retirement in 1997. He was Assistant  Secretary of Labor
for the Employment Standards  Administration from July 1989 to December 1990. He
served as a member of the Social  Security  Advisory Board from February 1996 to
January  1998.  Mr.  Brooks is also a  director  of Lason,  Inc.,  and  Covansys
Corporation.

                                       -3-


PATRICK F. MCCARTAN                                    CURRENT TERM EXPIRES 2004

         Patrick F.  McCartan,  age 67,  became a director of LP in 1998.  He is
managing partner of the  international law firm of Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, a
position that he has held since 1993. He is a Fellow of the American  College of
Trial Lawyers and the International Academy of Trial Lawyers.

LEE C. SIMPSON                                         CURRENT TERM EXPIRES 2004

         Lee C. Simpson, age 67, served as President and Chief Operating Officer
of LP on an interim  basis from July 1995 until March 1996.  He also was elected
to fill a vacancy on the Board of  Directors  in July 1995.  He was an executive
officer of LP from 1972 until his retirement in 1991 and previously  served as a
director of LP from 1972 until 1993.

COLIN D. WATSON                                        CURRENT TERM EXPIRES 2004

         Colin D.  Watson,  age 60,  became a director  of LP in June 2000.  Mr.
Watson was Vice  Chairman of the Board of Spar  Aerospace  Limited,  an aviation
services company with headquarters in Toronto,  Ontario,  Canada,  from December
1999 until his retirement from the Spar Aerospace board in January 2002. He also
served as Chief  Executive  Officer  of Spar  Aerospace  from  December  1999 to
December 2000, and President and Chief  Executive  Officer from 1996 to November
1999. From 1979 to 1996, Mr. Watson was President and Chief Executive Officer of
Rogers  Cable TV,  Ltd.  Mr.  Watson is also a  director  of  B-Split  II Corp.,
Call-Net  Enterprises  Inc.  (a Canadian  subsidiary  of Sprint  Corp.),  Cygnal
Technologies  Corp.,  Derlan  Industries  Ltd.,  Kasten Chase  Applied  Research
Limited, OnX Inc., Pelmorex Inc., and Rogers Cable TV, Ltd.

Board and Committee Meetings

         During  2001,  the  Board of  Directors  held  four  regular  quarterly
meetings.  Each  director  attended  at least  75% of the  total  number  of the
meetings of the Board and the meetings  held by all  committees  of the Board on
which he or she served during 2001.

Executive Committee

         The Board of Directors has an Executive Committee of which Mr. Suwyn is
Chair and Mr. Dunham and Mr. McCartan are members.  The Executive  Committee did
not meet during 2001.  The  Executive  Committee may exercise all the powers and
authority of the Board in the  management of LP's  business and affairs,  except
that the Executive  Committee may not (i) approve or adopt,  or recommend to the
stockholders,  any action or matter  expressly  required by the Delaware General
Corporation Law to be submitted to the  stockholders for approval or (ii) adopt,
amend or repeal LP's bylaws.

Finance and Audit Committee

         The Board of Directors  has a Finance and Audit  Committee  (the "Audit
Committee") currently consisting of Mr. Dunham, Chair, Mr. Brooks, Mr. Cook, and
Mr. Watson. During 2001, the Audit Committee held seven meetings,  five of which
were telephone conference meetings.

         The Audit Committee reviews and, as appropriate,  makes recommendations
to the Board on matters  relating to the  financial  affairs and policies of LP,
including capital structure issues,  dividend policy,  treasury stock purchases,
acquisitions   and   divestitures,   external   financing,   complex   financial
transactions,  the status and potential  financial  implications  of significant
legal and tax matters,  and investment and debt  policies.  The Audit  Committee
also reviews the significant  accounting  principles  employed in LP's financial
reporting  and  LP's  financial  results  included  in  LP's  annual  report  to
stockholders,  press  releases,  and filings  with the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission ("SEC").

                                       -4-


         The Audit Committee also has  responsibility  for various  auditing and
accounting  matters,  including (1)  recommending  to the Board of Directors the
selection  of  LP's  independent  public  accountants  and  (2)  reviewing  LP's
financial,  accounting,  auditing,  and internal control  systems,  annual audit
plans of the outside  accountants,  including the compensation to be paid to the
accountants,  the  opinions  to  be  rendered  by  the  outside  accountants  in
connection with their audits,  the  independence  and objectivity of the outside
accountants,  the effect of proposed or  implemented  changes in accounting  and
financial reporting policies on LP's financial  statements,  the scope, coverage
and  objectivity  of the audits  performed by LP's  internal  auditors and their
annual  internal  audit plans,  and the  effectiveness  of LP's  internal  legal
compliance programs.  The Audit Committee meets with both LP's internal auditors
and its outside accountants to address these issues.

Compensation Committee--Interlocks and Insider Participation

         The  Board  of  Directors  has  a  Compensation   Committee   currently
consisting of the following directors:  Mr. Brooks, Chair, Mr. Cook, Mr. Dunham,
and  Mr.  Watson.  Prior  to  May  2001,  Ms.  Lauderback  also  served  on  the
Compensation Committee.

         The   Compensation   Committee  held  two  meetings  during  2001.  The
Compensation  Committee's  functions are (1) to administer  LP's 1997  Incentive
Stock Award Plan, (2) to administer  LP's Annual Cash Incentive  Award Plan with
respect to the  participation of the chief executive officer and other executive
officers  of  LP  as  provided  in  the  plan,  (3)  to  administer  each  other
compensation  plan the  administration of which is delegated to the Compensation
Committee  by the  terms of the plan or by  action  of the  Board of  Directors,
including  the  participation  in each of LP's  compensation  plans by the chief
executive  officer and other  executive  officers of LP, and (4) to exercise all
authority of the Board of  Directors  with  respect to the  compensation  of the
chief  executive  officer  and other  executive  officers of LP,  including  the
determination of salaries and bonuses.

         Compensation decisions with respect to LP's chief executive officer and
other executive officers are made by a special  subcommittee of the Compensation
Committee to comply with special rules affecting  executive  compensation  under
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Internal  Revenue Code") and
the short-swing  profit  liability  provisions of the federal  securities  laws.
Presently,  all of the members of the Compensation  Committee are members of the
subcommittee.

         Information  concerning executive compensation is set forth below under
the caption "Executive Compensation."

Environmental Affairs Committee

         The  Board  of  Directors  has  an  Environmental   Affairs  Committee,
consisting of Mr. Simpson,  Chair, Mr. Hansen, Ms. Lauderback,  Mr. McCartan and
Mr. Suwyn. The Environmental Affairs Committee,  which met twice during 2001, is
responsible for reviewing the  effectiveness  of LP's  environmental  compliance
program.

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee; Nominations for Director

         The  Board of  Directors  has a  Nominating  and  Corporate  Governance
Committee (the "Nominating  Committee")  consisting of Mr. McCartan,  Chair, Mr.
Hansen,  Ms.  Lauderback,  and Mr. Simpson.  The Nominating  Committee met three
times during 2001.

         The Nominating  Committee is authorized to establish (1) procedures for
selecting and evaluating potential nominees for director and to recommend to the
Board of Directors  criteria for  membership  on the Board,  (2) policies on the
size and composition of the Board, the selection of candidates for director, the
compensation  of directors,  and the  composition of Board  committees,  and (3)
procedures and policies for all other matters of corporate  governance  that may
arise, including director independence, filling a

                                       -5-


vacancy in the office of chief executive officer,  staggered terms for the Board
of Directors, the roles of the directors, management and stockholders, responses
to stockholder  proposals,  and changes in LP's bylaws. The Nominating Committee
will consider  stockholders'  recommendations  concerning nominees for director.
Any such recommendation, including the name and qualifications of a nominee, may
be submitted to LP to the attention of the Chair of the Nominating Committee.

         LP's  bylaws  provide  that  nominations  for  election to the Board of
Directors may be made by the Board or by any  stockholder of record  entitled to
vote for the election of  directors.  Notice of a  stockholder's  intent to make
such a nomination  must be given in writing,  by personal  delivery or certified
mail, postage prepaid, to the Chairman of LP and must include the following:

     o   the name and address of the stockholder and each proposed nominee,

     o   a  representation  that  the  stockholder  is a record holder of Common
         Stock and  intends  to appear in person or by  proxy at the  meeting to
         nominate the person or persons specified in the notice,

     o   a description of any  arrangements or understandings pursuant to  which
         the nominations are to be made,

     o   the signed consent of each proposed  nominee to  serve as a director if
         elected, and

     o   such other information  regarding each nominee as  would be required to
         be included in LP's proxy  statement if the person had  been  nominated
         by the Board of Directors.

         The  notice  must be  delivered  at  least 45 days  prior to the  first
anniversary  of the  initial  mailing  date  of  LP's  proxy  materials  for the
preceding  year's annual meeting.  For next year's annual  meeting,  this notice
must be received by LP no later than February 8, 2003.

            ITEM 2 - AMENDMENT OF THE 1997 INCENTIVE STOCK AWARD PLAN

Background

         The 1997  Incentive  Stock  Award  Plan (the  "Stock  Award  Plan") was
approved by the LP  stockholders  at their annual  meeting in May 1997.  At this
year's annual  meeting,  the  stockholders  are being asked to approve the Stock
Award  Plan as  amended  by three  recent  amendments  adopted  by the  Board of
Directors  subject  to  stockholder  approval.  The  first  amendment,  approved
effective May 6, 2001,  increased the number of shares of Common Stock available
for issuance under the Stock Award Plan from 5,000,000 to 10,000,000 shares. The
second  amendment,  approved  effective  February 2, 2001,  increased the annual
limitation  on the  maximum  number  of  shares  subject  to  options  and stock
appreciation  rights that may be granted to an individual  participant  during a
calendar year from 300,000 to 600,000 shares. The third amendment  increased the
maximum  total  number of shares that may be made  subject to  restricted  stock
awards under the Stock Award Plan from  1,000,000  to  2,000,000  shares and was
approved  effective  February 25, 2002. At the 2002 Annual  Meeting,  a proposal
will be  presented  to the  stockholders  to  approve  the Stock  Award  Plan as
amended. If the proposal is not approved,  the Stock Award Plan will continue in
effect as if the three amendments described above had not been made.

         Over the past five years, LP has granted  increasing numbers of options
and other stock  incentive  awards under the Stock Award Plan as an incentive to
attract,  retain,  and reward key employees,  and to strengthen the mutuality of
interests  between  its  employees  and  stockholders.  The  Board of  Directors
believes  that its ability to make  grants of  stock-based  incentive  awards is
essential to enable LP to continue to attract,  retain,  and reward officers and
other key employees.  As of December 31, 2001, LP and its subsidiaries  employed
approximately  206 individuals  eligible to participate in the Stock Award Plan.
Also at that date,  options for 32,453  shares of Common Stock granted under the
Stock Award Plan had been  exercised,  options to purchase a total of  4,114,089
shares were outstanding,  performance share awards for a total of 144,848 shares
were  outstanding,  restricted  stock  (incentive  share)  awards for a total of
199,250  shares  were  outstanding,  and  509,360  shares of Common  Stock  were
available for future

                                       -6-


awards  under  the  Stock  Award  Plan.  More  than 99  percent  of the  options
outstanding  under the Stock Award Plan at December  31,  2001,  were granted at
exercise  prices  higher than $8.44 per share,  the closing price for the Common
Stock on that date, and over 41 percent of the outstanding  options were granted
at exercise prices of over $18.00 per share.

Description of the Stock Award Plan

         The summary set forth below outlines the material features of the Stock
Award Plan. The summary,  however,  is qualified in its entirety by reference to
the Stock Award Plan as amended, which is attached as Appendix A.

Administration

         The Stock Award Plan is  administered  by the  Compensation  Committee,
which  has  full  authority  to  administer  the  Stock  Award  Plan in its sole
discretion.  The  Compensation  Committee,  or  its  designee  with  respect  to
employees  who are  not  officers  and  within  specified  limits,  selects  the
participants  in the  Stock  Award  Plan,  determines  the types of awards to be
granted to participants,  determines the number of shares or share units subject
to such awards and  determines  the terms and  conditions  of  individual  award
agreements.  The Compensation Committee has the authority to interpret the Stock
Award Plan, to establish,  amend, and revoke any rules and regulations  relating
to it,  and to make all other  determinations  necessary  or  advisable  for its
administration.  The Stock Award Plan became  effective  March 1, 1997, and will
remain in effect until awards have been granted  covering all  available  shares
and all  outstanding  awards  under the Stock  Award  Plan have been  exercised,
settled, or terminated, or until the Stock Award Plan is otherwise terminated by
the Board of Directors.

Types of Awards Permitted

         As determined  by the  Compensation  Committee,  awards under the Stock
Award Plan may consist of (1) stock  options  (either  incentive  stock  options
("ISOs") or non-statutory  stock options),  (2) stock  appreciation  rights, (3)
performance  shares,  (4)  restricted  stock grants,  and (5) other  stock-based
awards. Each award under the Stock Award Plan is non-transferable, other than by
will or the laws of descent and  distribution,  provided  that the  Compensation
Committee,  in its  discretion,  may include in any award  agreement a provision
that the award is transferable to immediate family members or to a trust for the
benefit of or a partnership  composed solely of such family  members.  Also, the
Compensation Committee may, in its discretion,  include in any award agreement a
provision  that upon the  effective  date of a change in  control of LP, as that
term may be defined in the award  agreement,  all or a specified  portion of the
award will become fully vested,  will be  terminated,  or may be converted  into
shares of an acquiror.

         Stock  Options.  In the case of stock  options  granted under the Stock
Award  Plan,  each option must be granted at or above 100 percent of fair market
value  (defined  as the  closing  price on the  principal  exchange on which the
Common Stock is traded) of the shares of Common Stock  subject to such option on
the date of grant. The exercise price of an outstanding  option is not permitted
to be changed during the period of its exercisability  except in connection with
adjustments   for  stock   dividends,   stock   splits  or  other   changes   in
capitalization.  On March 8, 2002, the closing price for a share of Common Stock
on the New York Stock Exchange was $11.22. Stock options will be exercisable for
such period as may be specified by the Compensation Committee,  not in excess of
ten years  after the date of  grant.  The  Compensation  Committee  may,  in its
discretion, provide in an award agreement that, if previously acquired shares of
Common  Stock  are used by the  participant  in  payment  of either  the  option
exercise  price  or  tax   withholding   obligations,   the   participant   will
automatically  be granted a replacement  or reload option for a number of shares
equal to all or a portion  of the  shares  surrendered.  The  maximum  number of
shares  subject to options  and SARs  granted  under the Stock Award Plan to any
individual participant during any calendar year may not exceed 600,000 shares of
Common  Stock  (300,000  shares  if  amendment  of the Stock  Award  Plan is not
approved at the 2002 Annual Meeting).

                                       -7-

         Stock Appreciation Rights ("SARs").  A recipient of SARs is entitled to
receive  upon  exercise an amount equal to the increase in the fair market value
of a share of  Common  Stock  on the date of  exercise  over  the  grant  price,
multiplied by the number of shares as to which the rights are exercised. Payment
may be in cash, in shares of Common Stock,  or a combination  of cash and shares
as determined by the  Compensation  Committee.  No SAR may be exercised  earlier
than six  months  after  grant,  except  in the event of the  holder's  death or
disability.  SARs may be granted in connection with options or may be granted as
independent awards.

         Performance Shares.  Performance shares are authorized to be granted in
the form of actual  shares of Common  Stock,  or in share  units  having a value
equal to shares of Common Stock.  Performance  shares may be granted  subject to
such terms and conditions set forth in the award  agreement as the  Compensation
Committee deems appropriate  including,  without limitation,  the condition that
the  performance  shares will vest only in the event that specified  performance
goals are met within a  specified  performance  period.  The  maximum  number of
shares issuable to any individual  participant with respect to performance share
awards in any calendar year may not exceed 100,000 shares of Common Stock.

         In the case of performance share awards granted to executive  officers,
the  performance  goals  may  relate to  corporate  performance,  business  unit
performance,  or a combination of both. Corporate performance goals may be based
on financial  performance goals related to the performance of LP as a whole, and
may include one or more measures related to earnings, profitability, efficiency,
or return to stockholders,  such as earnings per share, operating profits, stock
price, costs of production,  or other measures.  Business unit performance goals
will be based on a combination of financial goals and strategic goals related to
the  performance  of an identified  business  unit for which a  participant  has
responsibility.  Strategic  goals  for a  business  unit  may  include  one or a
combination of objective  factors relating to success in implementing  strategic
plans or initiatives,  introducing products,  constructing facilities,  or other
identifiable  objectives.  Financial  goals for a business  unit may include the
degree  to which the  business  unit  achieves  one or more  objective  measures
related to its revenues, earnings, profitability,  efficiency, operating profit,
costs of production, or other measures. Any corporate or business unit goals may
be  expressed  as  absolute  amounts  or as ratios or  percentages.  Success  in
achieving such goals may be measured against various standards, including budget
targets,  improvement  over prior  periods,  and  performance  relative to other
companies, business units, or industry groups.

         The performance  goals  established  for performance  shares awarded in
1997 and 1998 were not  reached  and no payouts  were made;  performance  shares
awarded in 1999 and 2000 remain outstanding. Performance shares were not granted
under the Stock Award Plan in 2001.

         Restricted Stock. Restricted stock awards may be granted in the form of
actual  shares of Common  Stock,  share units  having a value equal to shares of
Common Stock,  or other rights to receive  shares of Common Stock in the future.
Restricted  stock  awards  will be subject to such terms and  conditions  as the
Compensation  Committee  deems  appropriate,   including  provisions  that  such
restricted stock, stock units or other rights be forfeited upon termination of a
participant's employment for specified reasons within a specified period of time
or upon  other  conditions  as set  forth  in the  award  agreement.  Awards  of
restricted stock are subject to the further limitation that the aggregate number
of shares of Common Stock that may be issued pursuant to restricted stock awards
under the Stock Award Plan may not exceed 2,000,000 shares  (1,000,000 shares if
amendment of the Stock Award Plan is not approved at the 2002 Annual Meeting).

         Other  Stock-Based  Awards.  The Compensation  Committee may also grant
other awards  under the Stock Award Plan  pursuant to which shares are or may in
the future be  acquired,  or awards may be  denominated  and  measured  by share
equivalent  units,  including  awards  valued using  measures  other than market
value. For any stock-based  awards granted to executive  officers that condition
vesting of such awards in whole or in part on attaining  performance  goals, the
performance  goals  shall  be the  same  as  described  above  with  respect  to
performance share awards.

                                       -8-

Certain Adjustments; Tax Consequences

         In the event of any  change in  capitalization  affecting  LP's  Common
Stock,  such  as  a  stock  dividend,  stock  split,  recapitalization,  merger,
consolidation,  split-up, spin-off,  combination or exchange of shares, or other
form of  reorganization,  or other distribution in respect of Common Stock other
than  regular  cash  dividends,   the  Compensation   Committee  may  make  such
substitution  or  adjustment,  if any,  that it deems to be  equitable as to the
number and kind of shares or other  securities  issued or reserved  for issuance
pursuant  to the Stock  Award  Plan,  to the  limits  on  awards  to  individual
participants, and to outstanding awards under the Stock Award Plan.

         The federal income tax  consequences of the Stock Award Plan for LP and
participants  will depend upon the types of awards that are granted from time to
time. In the case of non-statutory stock options, in general, a participant will
recognize  ordinary  compensation  income at the time of  exercise  in an amount
equal to the difference between the value of the shares subject to the option at
the date of exercise and the exercise price. Any gain upon sale of the shares in
excess of the fair market  value of the shares on the date of  exercise  will be
capital gain and any loss will be a capital  loss. To date,  only  non-statutory
stock options have been granted under the Stock Award Plan.

         In the case of ISOs which meet the  requirements  of Section 422 of the
Internal  Revenue Code, a participant  does not realize  taxable income upon the
grant of an ISO or upon the issuance of shares when the option is exercised. The
amount realized on the sale or taxable  exchange of such shares in excess of the
exercise  price  will be a capital  gain and any loss  will be a  capital  loss,
except that if the sale or exchange occurs within one year after exercise of the
option or two years after grant of the option,  the  participant  will recognize
compensation  taxable at  ordinary  income tax rates  measured  by the amount by
which the lesser of (i) the fair  market  value on the date of  exercise or (ii)
the amount realized on the sale of the shares,  exceeds the exercise price.  For
purposes of determining alternative minimum taxable income, an ISO is treated as
a non-statutory stock option.

         The grant of a SAR to a participant  will not cause the  recognition of
income  by the  participant.  Upon  exercise  of a  SAR,  the  participant  will
recognize ordinary income equal to the amount of cash payable to the participant
plus the fair market value of any shares delivered to the participant.

         In the  case of  performance-contingent  awards  and  restricted  stock
awards, in general, a participant will not recognize any income upon issuance of
an award.  Generally,  the  participant  will be required to recognize  ordinary
compensation  income at the date or dates, if any, that shares vest in an amount
equal to the value of such shares plus any cash received at the date of vesting.

         To the extent  participants  qualify for capital gains  treatment  with
respect to the sale of shares  acquired  pursuant to exercise of an ISO, LP will
not be entitled  to any tax  deduction  in  connection  with ISOs.  In all other
cases, LP will be entitled to receive a federal income tax deduction at the same
time and in the same amount as the amount  which is taxable to  participants  as
ordinary income with respect to awards.

         The information in this proxy statement  concerning  federal income tax
consequences  is intended  only for the  general  information  of  stockholders.
Participants  in the Stock Award Plan should  consult  their own tax advisors as
federal  income  tax  consequences  may  depend  upon  the  particular  terms of
individual awards and the specific circumstances of individual participants.

Awards

         At December  31, 2001,  options had been granted  under the Stock Award
Plan since its  adoption in 1997 as follows:  Mark A. Suwyn,  Chairman and Chief
Executive  Officer,   1,016,810  shares;  Curtis  M.  Stevens,  Vice  President,
Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer,  287,750 shares; J. Keith Matheney,  Vice
President,  OSB and Engineered Wood Products,  187,000 shares;  Michael J. Tull,
Vice  President,  Human  Resources,   160,050  shares;  Walter  M.  Wirfs,  Vice
President, Lumber and Plywood, 106,950 shares; all

                                       -9-


executive officers as a group (including Messrs. Suwyn, Stevens,  Matheney, Tull
and  Wirfs),  2,242,600  shares;  and all  non-executive  employees  as a group,
3,004,285 shares.  Non-employee  directors do not participate in the Stock Award
Plan.   See   also    "Executive    Compensation--Compensation    of   Executive
Officers--Option/SAR  Grants in Last  Fiscal  Year" for more  information  about
option grants to the executive  officers  named above during 2001 and "--Summary
Compensation  Table"  for  more  information  regarding  performance  share  and
incentive share awards to the executive officers named above.

         In  January  2002,  the  Compensation   Committee  approved  awards  of
non-statutory  stock options and  incentive  shares to officers and employees of
LP,  subject to  stockholder  approval of the Stock Award Plan as amended at the
2002 Annual Meeting. The table below provides information regarding awards under
the Stock Award Plan from January 1, 2002,  through  March 1, 2002.  The options
shown in the table will vest in three equal  annual  installments  beginning  in
January 2003, subject to acceleration of exercisability in the event of a change
in control of LP. The incentive share awards reflected in the table vest in full
at the end of five years, provided that the individual remains an employee of LP
or one of its  subsidiaries  through  the  end of that  period  and  subject  to
acceleration if the individual dies or becomes disabled,  a change in control of
LP occurs, or certain market price targets for the Common Stock are met.




                                NEW PLAN BENEFITS

                         1997 Incentive Stock Award Plan

                                                    Number of Shares
 Name and Title                                    Subject to Options       Incentive Shares(1)
 --------------                                    ------------------       -------------------

                                                                           
 Mark A. Suwyn                                           486,400                 $821,745
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

 Curtis M. Stevens                                       100,300                 $169,290
    Vice President, Treasurer and Chief
    Financial Officer

 J. Keith Matheney                                       77,800                  $131,625
    Vice President, OSB and Engineered
    Wood Products

 Michael J. Tull                                         70,600                  $119,070
    Vice President, Human Resources

 Walter M. Wirfs                                         50,700                   $85,455
    Vice President, Lumber and Plywood

 All executive officers as a group                      1,000,900               $1,690,470

 Non-executive officer employees as a                    815,400                 $786,915
    group
 -------------------


(1)  Represents the value of shares subject to awards based on the closing price
of the Common Stock, $8.10 per share, on the date of grant.

Stockholder Approval

         Approval  of  the  Stock  Award  Plan  as  amended   will  require  the
affirmative  vote of the  holders  of a majority  of the shares of Common  Stock
present or  represented at the meeting,  in person or by proxy,  and entitled to
vote on such  approval.  If a broker or  nominee  submits a proxy on behalf of a
beneficial  holder of Common Stock that  expressly  does not cast a vote on this
proposal, the proxy will not be counted and, as a result, will have no effect on
the outcome of the vote on this proposal.  Abstentions will be treated as if the
holder voted against this proposal.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS THAT  STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE IN FAVOR OF
APPROVAL OF THE STOCK AWARD PLAN AS AMENDED.

                                       -10-


 ITEM 3 - REAPPROVAL OF PERFORMANCE GOALS UNDER ANNUAL CASH INCENTIVE AWARD PLAN

Background

         In 1997, LP's stockholders approved performance goals under LP's Annual
Cash Incentive Award Plan (the "Cash Incentive  Plan") insofar as they relate to
incentive  awards to executive  officers of LP. The Cash Incentive Plan provides
for  annual  cash  incentive  opportunities  based  upon  meeting  or  exceeding
performance goals.

         Under Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code,  performance-based
compensation  which meets specified  criteria and is approved by stockholders is
not  subject to the  $1,000,000  limit per  executive  officer on  deductibility
applicable  to certain other types of  compensation.  The Board of Directors has
determined that it is in the best interest of LP that awards paid under the Cash
Incentive  Plan  continue  to qualify as  performance-based  compensation  under
Section 162(m). To qualify, cash awards must be conditioned on performance goals
that have been approved by stockholders within the last five years. The Board of
Directors has  therefore  decided to request the  stockholders  to reapprove the
performance  goals  under the Cash  Incentive  Plan  insofar  as they  relate to
incentive awards for persons who are executive officers of LP. LP is not seeking
approval of any amendments to the Cash Incentive Plan.

Description of Performance Goals

         Performance goals for cash incentive awards may relate to (1) corporate
performance,  (2) business unit performance,  and/or (3) individual performance.
The  business  criteria  on which  corporate  performance  is based may  include
various financial performance goals related to the performance of LP as a whole.
These  may  include  one  or  more  objective   measures  related  to  earnings,
profitability,  efficiency, or return to stockholders, and may include earnings,
earnings per share, operating profit, stock price, costs of production, or other
measures,  whether expressed as absolute  amounts,  as ratios, or percentages of
other amounts.  Success may be measured  against  various  standards,  including
budget targets,  improvement over prior years, and performance relative to other
companies or industry groups.

         The business  criteria on which individual  performance goals are based
may include a combination of financial  goals and strategic goals related to the
performance  of  an  identified   business  unit  for  which  an  executive  has
responsibility.  Strategic  goals  for a  business  unit  may  include  one or a
combination of objective  factors related to success in  implementing  strategic
plans or initiatives,  introducing products,  constructing facilities,  or other
identifiable  objectives.  Financial  goals for a business  unit may include the
degree to which the business unit  achieves one or more measures  related to its
revenues,  earnings,  profitability,   efficiency,  operating  profit,  cost  of
production,  or other  measures,  whether  expressed  as absolute  amounts or as
ratios  or  percentages,  which  may  be  measured  against  various  standards,
including budget targets, improvement over prior years, and performance relative
to other companies or business units.

         Performance  goals and formulas are  established  annually  relating to
performance for the current year. The persons eligible to receive cash incentive
award  opportunities  granted by the  Compensation  Committee  are the executive
officers  of LP.  Other  management  personnel  may  also be  eligible  for cash
incentive award opportunities as determined by their supervisors. The total cash
incentive  payout for any person may not exceed  $1,250,000 in any one year. See
"Executive  Compensation--Compensation Committee Report" below for a description
of the performance  goals  established  for cash incentive  award  opportunities
granted in 2001.

Awards

         In January 2002,  the  Compensation  Committee  established  the target
amounts of cash incentive award  opportunities for 2002 based upon the salary of
each of the  participants,  ranging from  approximately 20 to 55 percent of base
salary for participants other than the chief executive  officer,  as to

                                       -11-


whom the target  amount is set at 70 percent of his base salary  pursuant to his
employment  agreement.  See "Executive  Compensation--Agreements  with Executive
Officers."  Depending  upon the extent to which  performance  goals are met, the
actual amount paid may range from zero to 150 percent of the target amount.

The  performance  goals  for each  executive  will be based 60  percent  on LP's
earnings per share and 40 percent on  objective  individual  and  business  unit
goals  that  are  unique  to  each  of  the  participants.  Satisfaction  of the
performance goals will be determined by the Compensation Committee following the
end of 2002 and cash  payments,  if any,  will be made  within 30 days after the
determination  of the  amount  of the  award.  The  targeted  amounts  of  award
opportunities for 2002 that have been approved are as follows:

                                NEW PLAN BENEFITS

                        Annual Cash Incentive Award Plan


 Name and Title                                                 Target Amount(1)
 --------------                                                 ----------------

 Mark A. Suwyn                                                      $525,000
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

 Curtis M. Stevens                                                  $170,665
    Vice President, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer

 J. Keith Matheney                                                  $138,424
    Vice President, OSB and Engineered Wood Products

 Michael J. Tull                                                    $131,560
    Vice President, Human Resources

 Walter M. Wirfs                                                    $124,025
    Vice President, Lumber and Plywood

 All executive officers as a group                                $1,495,543

 All non-executive officer employees as a group                   $4,319,717

------------------
(1)  Depending on satisfaction of performance  goals,  the amount paid may range
     from zero to 150 percent of the amount shown.

Stockholder Approval

         In order for amounts which may be paid to executive  officers  pursuant
to  the  Cash  Incentive  Plan  to  continue  to  qualify  as  performance-based
compensation  under Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code,  the Board of
Directors is asking stockholders to reapprove the terms of the performance goals
as outlined above,  which will be used by the Compensation  Committee as a basis
for specific cash incentive award opportunities for executive  officers.  In the
event  stockholders  do not reapprove  the terms of the  performance  goals,  no
further awards will be made to executive  officers under the Cash Incentive Plan
in the future and the  Compensation  Committee  will  consider  other methods of
providing appropriate compensation to executive officers.

         Reapproval  of the terms of the  performance  goals  will  require  the
affirmative  vote of the  holders  of a majority  of the shares of Common  Stock
present or  represented at the meeting,  in person or by proxy,  and entitled to
vote on such  approval.  If a broker or  nominee  submits a proxy on behalf of a
beneficial  holder of shares of Common Stock that expressly does not cast a vote
on this proposal,  the proxy will not be counted and, as a result,  will have no
effect on the outcome of the vote on this proposal.  Abstentions will be treated
as if the holder voted against this proposal.

                                       -12-


         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS THAT  STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE IN FAVOR OF
REAPPROVAL OF THE TERMS OF THE PERFORMANCE GOALS UNDER THE ANNUAL CASH INCENTIVE
AWARD PLAN.

                                 OTHER BUSINESS

         At the time this proxy  statement  was printed,  management  knew of no
matters to be presented at the annual  meeting  other than the items of business
listed in the Notice of Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders.  If any matters  other
than the listed items properly come before the meeting, the proxies named in the
accompanying  form of proxy will vote or refrain  from voting on such matters in
accordance with their judgment.

                       FINANCE AND AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

         The Finance and Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors  (the "Audit
Committee")  assists the Board of  Directors in the  discharge of its  fiduciary
obligations to LP's  stockholders  relating to the quality and integrity of LP's
financial   statements,   its  accounting  and  reporting  practices,   and  the
independence  and  performance  of LP's outside  auditor and  performance of its
internal  accounting  staff. The Audit Committee is comprised of four directors,
each of whom has been determined by the Board of Directors to meet the financial
literacy and  independence  requirements  set forth in the corporate  governance
listing standards of the New York Stock Exchange,  on which LP's Common Stock is
listed.  The Audit Committee's  activities are governed by a written charter,  a
copy of which is attached to this Proxy Statement as Appendix B.

         In  discharging  its  responsibilities,  the  Audit  Committee  and its
individual members have met with management and LP's outside auditor, Deloitte &
Touche LLP, to review LP's  accounting  functions  and the audit  process and to
discuss the Company's audited  financial  statements for the year ended December
31, 2001. The Audit Committee  discussed and reviewed with its outside  auditing
firm all matters that the firm was required to communicate  and discuss with the
Audit Committee under applicable auditing  standards,  including those described
in Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61, as amended,  regarding communications
with audit  committees.  The Audit  Committee has also received from its outside
auditor a formal written  statement  relating to  independence  consistent  with
Independence  Standards  Board Standard No. 1,  "Independence  Discussions  with
Audit Committees," and discussed with the outside auditor any relationships that
may adversely affect its objectivity and independence.

         Based on its review and  discussions  with  management and LP's outside
auditor,  the Audit  Committee  recommended  to the Board of Directors that LP's
audited  financial  statements for the year ended December 31, 2001, be included
in LP's Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC.

Respectfully submitted,

Archie W. Dunham, Chair
William C. Brooks
E. Gary Cook
Colin D. Watson

                                       -13-


                             HOLDERS OF COMMON STOCK

Five Percent Beneficial Owners

         The following  table  provides  information  concerning  the beneficial
ownership of Common Stock by the persons known to LP to  beneficially  own 5% or
more of the outstanding Common Stock:


                                            Common Stock
                                            Beneficially Owned                   Approximate
Name and Address                            As of Dec. 31, 2001                Percent of Class
----------------                            -------------------                ----------------
                                                                               
Louisiana-Pacific Hourly                          4,994,913(1)                       4.8%
   401(k) and Profit Sharing Plan
   805 S.W. Broadway
   Portland, Oregon  97205

Louisiana-Pacific Salaried                        3,307,284(1)                       3.2%
   401(k) and Profit Sharing Plan
   805 S.W. Broadway
   Portland, Oregon  97205                        -----------                       -----
          TOTAL                                    8,302,197                         8.0%

-----------------------


(1) Shares held by the Plans are voted by the  trustee  at the direction  of the
Administrative  Committee  for the Plans,  which is comprised  of LP  management
employees.  The trusts may be deemed to be a "group" under the stock  beneficial
ownership rules of the SEC.


Directors and Executive Officers

         The following table summarizes the beneficial ownership of Common Stock
of the directors, nominees for director, and current executive officers of LP:

                                  Common Stock               Approximate
                                Beneficially Owned            Percent of
Name                          As of March 8, 2002(1)(2)         Class
----                          -------------------------      -----------

William C. Brooks(5)                 35,561                       *

E. Gary Cook(5)                      10,823                       *

Archie W. Dunham(5)                  50,957                       *

Paul W. Hansen(5)                    17,161                       *

Brenda J. Lauderback(5)              21,157                       *

Patrick F. McCartan(5)               19,261                       *

J. Keith Matheney(3)                219,685                     0.2%

Lee C. Simpson(5)                    74,904                       *

Curtis M. Stevens(3)                295,657                     0.3%

Mark A. Suwyn(3)(4)               1,246,423                     1.2%

Michael J. Tull(3)                  219,853                     0.2%

Colin D. Watson(5)                   10,823                       *

Walter M. Wirfs(3)                  122,441                     0.1%

All current directors and         2,928,812                     2.7%
executive officers as a
group (18 persons)(3)(4)(5)
--------------------

* Percentages under 0.1% are not shown.

(1)  Shares are shown as beneficially owned if the person named in the table has
     or  shares  the  power to vote or  direct  the  voting  of, or the power to
     dispose of, or direct the disposition of, such shares.

                                       -14-


     Inclusion of shares in the table does not necessarily mean that the persons
     named have any economic  beneficial  interest in shares set forth  opposite
     their respective names.

(2)  Includes shares reserved for issuance under immediately exercisable options
     and  options  which will become  exercisable  within 60 days after March 8,
     2002, as follows:  Mr. Brooks,  32,400 shares;  Mr. Cook, 7,200 shares; Mr.
     Dunham,  46,800 shares; Mr. Hansen,  12,600 shares; Ms. Lauderback,  18,000
     shares;  Mr. McCartan,  16,200 shares;  Mr. Matheney,  134,667 shares;  Mr.
     Simpson,  48,600 shares; Mr. Stevens,  222,917 shares;  Mr. Suwyn,  928,724
     shares;  Mr. Tull,  157,350 shares;  Mr. Watson,  7,200 shares;  Mr. Wirfs,
     62,983 shares; and all current directors and executive officers as a group,
     2,075,086 shares.

(3)  Includes shares held by the LP Salaried 401(k) and Profit Sharing Plan (the
     "401(k)  Plan")  and  beneficially  owned by the  following  officers:  Mr.
     Matheney,  12,712  shares;  Mr.  Stevens,  2,636 shares;  Mr. Suwyn,  5,371
     shares;  Mr. Tull,  4,047 shares;  Mr. Wirfs,  228 shares;  and all current
     executive officers as a group, 39,221 shares.

(4)  Includes 60,000 shares of unvested restricted stock which Mr. Suwyn has the
     power to vote.

(5)  Includes  restricted  shares granted under the 2000  Non-Employee  Director
     Restricted Stock Plan as to which the following directors have the power to
     vote: Mr. Brooks, Mr. Dunham, Mr. Hansen, Ms. Lauderback, Mr. McCartan, and
     Mr. Simpson,  3,061 shares each; and Mr. Cook and Mr. Watson,  3,623 shares
     each.

             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

         Section  16 of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of  1934  ("Section  16")
requires  that  reports of  beneficial  ownership of Common Stock and changes in
such  ownership  be filed with the SEC and the New York Stock  Exchange  by LP's
officers,  directors, and certain other "reporting persons." Based solely upon a
review  of copies of Forms 3, 4, and 5 (and  amendments  thereto)  filed by LP's
reporting  persons  and  written   representations  by  such  persons,  to  LP's
knowledge, all Section 16 reporting requirements applicable to such persons were
complied  with for the  period  specified  in the SEC's  rules  governing  proxy
statement  disclosures,  except  that E. Gary Cook and  Archie  W.  Dunham  each
reported an  acquisition  of phantom  shares  pursuant to the director  deferred
compensation plan after the report was due.

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Compensation Committee Report

To the Stockholders of Louisiana-Pacific Corporation:

OVERVIEW

         The goals of LP's  executive  compensation  program  are to recruit and
retain qualified and talented  executives who will provide effective  leadership
in meeting the  challenges  facing the company and to provide  those  executives
with  competitive  pay and  incentives  for  performance  while  aligning  their
interests  with those of LP's  stockholders.  The  principal  objectives of LP's
compensation  strategy  are (1) to  reinforce  LP's  business  organization  and
strategic  direction,  (2) to be sufficiently  competitive to attract and retain
needed   management   talent,   and  (3)  to   provide   compensation   that  is
performance-based  and aligned  with  stockholder  interests  yet remains  fair,
reasonable,  and  simple.  To  accomplish  these  objectives  during  2001,  the
Compensation    Committee   awarded    compensation   in   accordance   with   a
previously-approved  program with four principal  elements--base  salary, annual
cash  incentive  opportunities,  annual  stock  option  grants and, for selected
senior   executives,   annual  awards  of  incentive   shares.   Cash  incentive
opportunities  are awarded under the LP Annual Cash Incentive Award Plan.  Stock
option grants and awards of incentive  shares are made under LP's 1997 Incentive
Stock Award Plan.
                                       -15-


Decisions  as to awards  under the 1997  Incentive  Stock Award Plan and certain
other matters are made by a  subcommittee  of the  Compensation  Committee.  Ms.
Lauderback was a member of the Compensation Committee until February 2001.

         In general,  base salary is  intended to be  competitive  at the median
with other forest and building products companies. In addition, there are annual
opportunities  for  cash  incentive  payments  based on  corporate  performance,
business unit  performance,  and individual  performance  which,  if performance
targets are met,  should permit an executive to receive total cash  compensation
at above median levels for forest and building products companies.  Annual stock
option grants in an amount based on individual  performance recognize individual
achievement  while aligning  management  interests with  stockholder  interests,
reinforcing  long-term  performance,  and facilitating  stock ownership.  Annual
incentive  share awards provide  selected  senior  executives  with  significant
incentives to maximize  stockholder value and increase their equity ownership in
LP.

         In addition  to the  elements of the  compensation  strategy  described
above,  LP  previously  had a deferred  compensation  plan for  executives.  The
Executive  Deferred  Compensation Plan provided for elective pretax deferrals of
up to 90 percent of base salary and up to 100 percent of cash bonuses.  Deferred
amounts  up to 7  percent  of base  salary  were  matched  by  contributions  to
participants' plan accounts at LP's expense. The Executive Deferred Compensation
Plan was terminated  effective  December 1, 2001,  and all  previously  deferred
amounts were distributed to participants by January 31, 2002.

         LP also has a Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan ("SERP"), which is
designed to provide  competitive  target retirement  benefits when combined with
other company-paid retirement benefits and Social Security. LP's chief executive
officer,  Mark A.  Suwyn,  does not  participate  in the SERP  because  he has a
separate supplemental  retirement benefit under his employment agreement,  which
is described in detail under the caption "Retirement Benefits" below.

         In  November  1999,  the  subcommittee  of the  Compensation  Committee
approved an  Executive  Loan Program to encourage  LP's  executive  officers and
selected key management  personnel to acquire an increased equity interest in LP
stock and to provide additional incentives to remain employed by LP. In November
2000, the subcommittee of the Compensation Committee authorized additional loans
under the program  during a 60-day period  ending  January 23, 2001. In November
2001,  the  subcommittee  amended  the  Executive  Loan  Program to provide  for
forgiveness of loans in whole or in part following  termination of employment in
specified  circumstances.  The program is described under  "Management Loans and
Other  Transactions"  below.  In adopting the program in 1999 and offering it to
additional  officers in 2000,  the  subcommittee  considered how it would fit in
with LP's other executive compensation  programs,  including annual stock option
grants and  executive  severance  agreements  relating to a potential  change in
control.

DETERMINATION OF BASE SALARIES

         In February  2001,  the  Compensation  Committee  established  new base
salaries for  executive  officers  based upon a comparison  of salaries at other
forest and building  products  companies  (including all of the companies in the
Standard & Poor's  Paper & Forest  Products  Index) and  individual  performance
during 2000. As a result of this review, the chief executive officer's 2001 base
salary  remained  unchanged  from 2000.  Due to  individual  circumstances,  the
salaries for other  executive  officers for 2001 varied from  slightly  above to
slightly  below the median salary for  comparable  positions at the other forest
and building products  companies  reviewed and increased by a range of 0 percent
to 10 percent over 2000 levels.

GRANTS OF CASH INCENTIVE AWARDS

         The  Compensation   Committee  approved  annual  cash  incentive  award
opportunities  in February 2001 under LP's Annual Cash Incentive  Award Plan for
Mr.  Suwyn and certain  other  executive  officers,  subject to  achievement  of
specified  performance goals. The target amounts of the awards were based on the

                                       -16-


salary of each  participant  and  equaled  55  percent  of base  salary for LP's
executive officers, except for Mr. Suwyn, whose target amount equaled 70 percent
of his base salary, as required by his employment agreement.

         Depending  upon the  extent to which  performance  goals  are met,  the
actual amount paid as a cash incentive  award may range from zero to 150 percent
of the target amount. The performance goals for each participating executive for
2001  were  based 60  percent  on LP's  earnings  per share  and 40  percent  on
objective individual and business unit goals unique to each of the participants.

         The business  criteria on which individual  performance goals are based
include goals related to success in developing and implementing particular tasks
assigned to an individual  executive.  These goals,  therefore,  naturally  vary
depending upon the  responsibilities  of individual  executives and may include,
without  limitation,  goals  related to success in developing  and  implementing
particular management plans or systems,  reorganizing departments,  establishing
business  relationships,   or  resolving  identified  problems.  For  2001,  the
individual performance goals for Mr. Suwyn included goals related to new product
introductions  and sales  levels,  cash flow levels,  safety,  cost  reductions,
dispositions of unprofitable businesses,  succession planning, and certain other
strategic business initiatives.

         The business  criteria on which  business  unit  performance  goals are
based include a combination  of financial  goals and strategic  goals related to
the  performance  of an  identified  business  unit for which an  executive  has
responsibility.  Strategic  goals  for a  business  unit  may  include  one or a
combination of objective  factors related to success in  implementing  strategic
plans or initiatives,  introducing products,  constructing facilities,  or other
identifiable  objectives.  Financial  goals for a business  unit may include the
degree to which the business unit  achieves one or more measures  related to its
revenues,  earnings,  profitability,  efficiency,  operating  profit,  costs  of
production,  or other  measures,  whether  expressed  as absolute  amounts or as
ratios  or  percentages,  which  may  be  measured  against  various  standards,
including budget targets, improvement over prior years, and performance relative
to other companies or business units.

         In October  2001,  management  determined  that  circumstances  did not
warrant the payment of cash  incentive  awards for 2001.  In January  2002,  the
Compensation  Committee confirmed that no cash incentive awards would be paid to
any LP employees for 2001 under the Annual Cash Incentive  Award Plan because of
management's  decision and because the corporate  goal relating to LP's earnings
per share had not been met.

GRANTS OF STOCK OPTIONS

         Another  significant  element  in LP's  compensation  program is annual
grants of nonstatutory stock options.  In February 2001, the subcommittee of the
Compensation  Committee considered proposed option grants to executive officers.
Preliminary  target values (using the Black-Scholes  valuation model) were based
on  competitive  levels equal to a percentage  of the  executive's  base salary.
These target values  equaled 87 percent of each  executive  officer's  2001 base
salary, except for Mr. Suwyn, whose target value equaled 180 percent of his 2001
base salary.  Individual target values are subject to increase or decrease based
on  performance  for the prior year.  Option grants to certain of LP's executive
officers are shown under  "Option/SAR  Grants in Last Fiscal  Year"  below.  All
options  granted  in  2001  will  become   exercisable  in  three  equal  annual
installments  beginning  one year from the date of grant and will  terminate  10
years after the date of grant.

INCENTIVE SHARE AWARDS

         In February 2001,  after  reviewing a market  analysis of  compensation
levels in the forest and building  products  industry,  the  subcommittee of the
Compensation  Committee concluded that the award of performance shares under the
1997  Incentive  Stock  Award  Plan was not  aligned  with  LP's  philosophy  of
providing variable  incentive  compensation at the 60th percentile of the market
and decided to discontinue

                                       -17-



such awards.  Instead,  the subcommittee decided to grant incentive share awards
to selected senior executives.  Incentive shares are rights to receive shares of
Common  Stock  that  vest in full at the end of five  years,  provided  that the
individual remains an employee of LP or one of its subsidiaries  through the end
of that period.  An award will vest in full immediately if the recipient dies or
becomes  disabled,  a change in  control of LP occurs,  or certain  share  price
targets are met before the end of the required  service  period.  The  incentive
share  awards  made in  February  2001 were  based on target  values  (using the
Black-Scholes  valuation  model) based on a percentage of 2001 base salary equal
to 60 percent  for Mr.  Suwyn and 43 percent for each other  executive  officer,
subject to adjustment for individual performance in 2000.

DEDUCTIBILITY OF COMPENSATION

         To the  extent  consistent  with  its  goal of  maintaining  a fair and
competitive   compensation  package,  the  Compensation  Committee  attempts  to
structure LP's executive  compensation  to be deductible for income tax purposes
by complying with tax  requirements  applicable to the  deductibility of certain
types of compensation.

Respectfully submitted,

William C. Brooks, Chair
E. Gary Cook
Archie W. Dunham
Colin D. Watson


                                       -18-


Performance Graph

         The following  graph is required to be included in this proxy statement
under  applicable  rules of the SEC.  The graph  compares  the total  cumulative
return  to  investors,   including  dividends  paid  (assuming  reinvestment  of
dividends) and  appreciation or depreciation in stock price,  from an investment
in LP Common Stock for the period January 1, 1997, through December 31, 2001, to
the total  cumulative  return to investors  from the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock
Index and the  Standard & Poor's  Paper and Forest  Products  Index for the same
period. Stockholders are cautioned that the graph shows the returns to investors
only as of the dates noted and may not be  representative of the returns for any
other past or future period.


                 COMPARISON OF FIVE-YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
    Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, S&P 500, and S&P Paper and Forest Products
                     December 31, 1996 to December 31, 2001


[Graphic omitted]



                                     Dec-96     Dec-97     Dec-98     Dec-99    Dec-00     Dec-01
                                     ------     ------     ------     ------    ------     ------

                                                                          
LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION         $100       92.40      91.67      72.79     55.48      47.28

S&P 500 INDEX                         $100      133.36     171.48     207.56    188.66     166.24

PAPER & FOREST PRODUCTS               $100      107.22     109.35     152.90    125.21     128.22





                                       -19-





Compensation of Executive Officers


                                                SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
                                                                                Long-Term
                                                                               Compensation
                                          Annual Compensation                     Awards
                                   ----------------------------------   ---------------------------
          Name                                               Other                      Number of
          and                                               Annual      Restricted       Shares        All Other
        Principal                                           Compen-       Stock         Underlying     Compen-
        Position            Year     Salary     Bonus(1)    sation(2)    Awards(3)     Options/SARs    sation(4)
        --------            ----     ------     --------    ---------   ----------     ------------    ---------
                                                                               
Mark A. Suwyn(5)            2001   $750,000    $      -0-         ---     $657,165         337,450     $61,136
   Chairman and Chief       2000    750,000           -0-         ---          ---         189,360      63,860
   Executive Officer        1999    703,015       668,750         ---          ---         258,000      25,489

Curtis M. Stevens           2001   $306,787    $      -0-         ---     $151,523          77,750     $23,986
   Vice President,          2000    281,346           -0-         ---          ---          39,000      24,038
   Treasurer and Chief      1999    234,731       180,180         ---          ---          55,000      17,191
   Financial Officer

J. Keith Matheney           2001   $250,005    $      -0-         ---     $114,635          59,000     $18,699
   Vice President,          2000    239,837           -0-         ---          ---          39,000      19,720
   OSB and                  1999    224,235       167,248         ---          ---          46,000      31,045
   Engineered
   Wood Products

Michael J. Tull             2001   $237,608    $      -0-         ---      $81,720          42,050     $26,995
   Vice President,          2000    228,183           -0-         ---          ---          32,000      26,296
   Human Resources          1999    215,177       135,816         ---          ---          41,000      22,203

Walter M. Wirfs             2001   $221,952    $      -0-         ---      $97,610          49,950     $19,942
   Vice President,          2000    202,404           -0-     $20,383          ---          32,000      16,480
   Lumber and               1999    157,116       111,150         ---          ---          25,000         ---
   Plywood
-------------------------



(1)   Represents  amounts paid under LP's Annual Cash Incentive  Award Plan upon
      satisfaction of performance goals.

(2)   Represents primarily reimbursement for financial planning services.  Other
      amounts of personal benefits have been excluded as being below the minimum
      thresholds included in the proxy disclosure rules of the SEC.

(3)   Represents  the value of incentive  shares on the grant date,  February 3,
      2001.  Incentive  shares are rights to receive shares of Common Stock that
      vest  in  full at the end of five  years,  provided  that  the  individual
      remains an  employee of LP or one of its  subsidiaries  through the end of
      that  period.  Participants  do not have  rights to vote or  receive  cash
      dividends,  if any,  until the  shares  vest.  An award  will vest in full
      immediately if the recipient dies or becomes disabled, a change in control
      of LP occurs,  or certain share price targets for the Common Stock are met
      before the end of the  required  service  period.  Change in  control  has
      substantially the same meaning as described with respect to certain change
      in  control   employment   agreements  under  "Agreements  with  Executive
      Officers" below.  Incentive share awards provide for reimbursement for any
      excise tax  imposed as a result of  accelerated  vesting  upon a change in
      control deemed to constitute  excess  parachute  payments plus any related
      federal, state and local income taxes. In accordance with SEC proxy rules,
      the value of the  incentive  shares is based on the closing  sale price of
      the Common  Stock on  February  2, 2001,  which was $11.35 per share.  The
      following table shows (a) the total number of incentive shares credited to
      each of the named executive  officers and (b) the value of those incentive
      shares based on


                                       -20-


      the  closing  sale price of the Common  Stock on  December  31,  2001.  No
      incentive shares were granted prior to 2001.

                             Incentive Shares         Value at 12/31/01
                             ----------------         -----------------
 Mark A. Suwyn                    57,900                 $418,676

 Curtis M. Stevens                13,350                  112,674

 J. Keith Matheney                10,100                   85,244

 Michael J. Tull                   7,200                   60,768

 Walter M. Wirfs                   8,600                   72,584



(4)   Amounts shown for 2001 include (i) an annual matching contribution to LP's
      medical  savings plan of $100 for each named  executive  officer;  (ii) an
      annual matching  contribution under LP's Executive  Deferred  Compensation
      Plan equal to the amount  deferred up to 7 percent of salary,  as follows:
      Mr. Suwyn, $48,462; Mr. Stevens, $19,804; Mr. Matheney, $16,789; Mr. Tull,
      $15,345;  and  Mr.  Wirfs,  $14,168;  (iii)  interest  accrued  under  the
      Executive  Deferred  Compensation  Plan (to the extent that such  interest
      exceeds  amounts  accrued at a rate equal to 120 percent of the applicable
      federal  long-term  rate),  compounded  monthly,  as follows:  Mr.  Suwyn,
      $11,654; Mr. Stevens, $2,829; Mr. Matheney, $1,132; Mr. Tull, $10,584; and
      Mr. Wirfs,  $5,067;  and (iv) an annual matching  contribution  under LP's
      401(k) Plan as follows:  Mr.  Suwyn,  $1,010;  Mr.  Stevens,  $1,253;  Mr.
      Matheney, $678; Mr. Tull, $966; and Mr. Wirfs, $607.

(5)   At December 31, 2001,  Mr. Suwyn held 60,000  shares of  restricted  stock
      with a dollar value of $506,400,  subject to future vesting or forfeiture.
      The shares will vest upon Mr.  Suwyn's  reaching age 62 while  employed by
      LP,  subject  to  acceleration  of  vesting  as to  all  shares  upon  the
      occurrence  of  certain  specified  events  during  Mr.  Suwyn's  term  of
      employment,  including  a change in control of LP.  See  "Agreements  with
      Executive  Officers"  below.  Cash  dividends,  if any, are payable on his
      restricted  stock at the same time as dividends on unrestricted  shares of
      Common Stock.




                                       OPTION/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR


                                                  Individual Grants(1)
                           ------------------------------------------------------------------
                             Number of             Percent of
                              Shares              Total Options
                            Underlying             Granted to       Exercise or
                              Options               Employees       Base Price     Expiration        Grant Date
     Name                     Granted              During 2001      Per Share         Date         Present Value(2)
     ----                   -----------           -------------     -----------    ----------      ----------------
                                                                                     
 Mark A. Suwyn                 337,450               20.3%           $11.35           2/3/11        $1,201,322
 Curtis M. Stevens              77,750                4.7             11.35           2/3/11           276,790
 J. Keith Matheney              59,000                3.5             11.35           2/3/11           210,040
 Michael J. Tull                42,050                2.5             11.35           2/3/11           149,698
 Walter M. Wirfs                49,950                3.0             11.35           2/3/11           177,822
 --------------------



(1)   No stock appreciation  rights ("SARs") were granted to the named executive
      officers  during  2001.  All options were granted for the number of shares
      indicated at exercise  prices equal to the fair market value of the Common
      Stock on the date of grant.  The options  will vest in three equal  annual
      installments  beginning one year  following the date of grant,  subject to
      acceleration of  exercisability in the event of a change in control of LP.
      If such  acceleration of  exercisability  results in an "excess  parachute
      payment" within the meaning of Section 280G of the Internal  Revenue Code,
      the amount of any excise tax imposed on a participant  by Section  4999(a)
      of the Internal  Revenue Code directly  attributable to such  acceleration
      will be reimbursed by LP, together with any income or excise taxes imposed
      on such reimbursement.


                                       -21-



(2)   The values shown have been calculated  based on the  Black-Scholes  option
      pricing  model  and  do  not  reflect  the  effect  of   restrictions   on
      transferability  or  vesting.  The  values  were  calculated  based on the
      following  assumptions:  (i) expectations  regarding  volatility of 42.35%
      were based on monthly stock price data for LP for the 36 months  preceding
      the grant date,  (ii) the risk-free  rate of return (5.29%) was assumed to
      be the Treasury Bond rate whose maturity  corresponds to the expected term
      (10.0 years) of the options granted;  and (iii) a dividend yield of 3.91%.
      The values  which may  ultimately  be  realized  will depend on the market
      value of the Common Stock during the periods  during which the options are
      exercisable,  which may vary significantly from the assumptions underlying
      the Black-Scholes model.




                                        AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                                             AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION/SAR VALUES(1)


                                                        Number of Securities Underlying       Value of Unexercised
                                                              Unexercised Options             In-the-Money Options
                                Shares                        at December 31, 2001           at December 31, 2001(3)
                              Acquired on               -------------------------------      -----------------------
                               Exercise        Value
                              During 2001    Realized     Exercisable   Unexercisable      Exercisable   Unexercisable
     Name                     -----------    --------     -----------   -------------      -----------   -------------
                                                                                        
     Mark A. Suwyn                  --            --         667,120         549,690           $ 0           $ 0
     Curtis M. Stevens               --           --         165,667         122,083             0             0
     J. Keith Matheney           10,800     $13,716(2)        86,667         100,333             0             0
     Michael J. Tull                 --           --         119,000          77,050             0             0
     Walter M. Wirfs                 --           --          27,334          79,616             0             0
-----------------


(1)   The named executive officers did not exercise any SARs during 2001 or hold
      any SARs at year-end.

(2)   Represents  the  amount by which the fair  market  value of the  shares of
      Common Stock  underlying the options at the date of exercise  exceeded the
      exercise price.

(3)   Based on the  difference  between the closing price of the Common Stock on
      December 31, 2001,  $8.44 per share,  and the option  exercise  price,  if
      lower.


Retirement Benefits

         LP's Supplemental  Executive  Retirement Plan (the "SERP") is a defined
benefit  plan  intended  to  provide  supplemental  retirement  benefits  to key
executives  designated by the committee  appointed to administer  the SERP.  The
following table shows the estimated  annual benefits  payable to participants in
the SERP upon retirement  based on the indicated  years of credited  service and
compensation  levels  (without  reduction  for Social  Security  or the value of
benefits under LP's other retirement plans).

                                      -22-



                               PENSION PLAN TABLE

                                           Years of Credited Service
         Final Average               -------------------------------------
         Compensation                   5             10            15
         ------------                   -             --            --

       $  150,000..........          $ 25,000       $50,000       $75,000
          200,000..........            33,333        66,667       100,000
          300,000..........            50,000       100,000       150,000
          400,000..........            66,667       133,333       200,000
          500,000..........            83,333       166,667       250,000
          600,000..........           100,000       200,000       300,000
          700,000..........           116,667       233,333       350,000
          800,000..........           133,333       266,667       400,000
        1,000,000..........           166,667       333,333       500,000
        1,200,000..........           200,000       400,000       600,000
        1,500,000..........           250,000       500,000       750,000


         Participants  will become fully vested in their benefits under the SERP
after completing five years of participation in the SERP,  beginning  January 1,
1997.  Vesting will be  accelerated in the event of the  participant's  death or
disability or a change in control of LP.

         The  annual  benefit  payable  under  the SERP is equal to 50% of final
average compensation multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is years of
credited  service  (up to a maximum of 15) and the  denominator  of which is 15.
Years of credited  service are  determined  under the  provisions  of the 401(k)
Plan. If a participant's employment is involuntarily terminated within 36 months
after a change in  control  of LP occurs,  he or she will be  credited  with two
additional  years of service.  The years of service  credited  to the  executive
officers named in the Summary  Compensation Table above as of December 31, 2001,
are as follows: Mr. Stevens, 4.3 years; Mr. Matheney,  31.8 years; Mr. Tull, 5.4
years, and Mr. Wirfs, 2.8 years. Mr. Suwyn does not participate in the SERP.

         Final  average  compensation  on  an  annual  basis  is  defined  as  a
participant's  compensation during the 60 consecutive months out of the last 120
months  of  employment  in which the  participant's  compensation  was  highest,
divided by five.  Compensation includes base pay and annual cash incentives (for
the executive  officers named in the Summary  Compensation  Table above,  salary
plus  annual  bonus) paid to a  participant  or  deferred  under LP's  Executive
Deferred  Compensation Plan, but excludes all other benefits. If a participant's
employment  is  involuntarily  terminated  within  36  months  after a change in
control  of LP,  benefits  under  the  SERP  will  be  calculated  based  on the
participant's base salary during the preceding 12 months plus the average annual
cash incentive paid in the preceding  three years,  if higher than final average
compensation.

         Retirement  benefits shown in the table above are expressed in terms of
single life  annuities,  are  subject to  reduction  in the event of  retirement
before age 62 and will be  reduced  by an amount  equal to the sum of (1) 50% of
the participant's  primary Social Security benefit  determined at age 62 and (2)
the value of the participant's benefits under LP's other retirement plans.

         During 2000, LP amended an existing  frozen  defined  benefit plan into
the Retirement  Account Plan, in which certain  employees,  including  executive
officers,  participate. The Retirement Account Plan is a cash balance plan under
which  there is an account  for each  participating  employee to which an annual
contribution  credit is made equal to five percent of compensation (with certain
exclusions) up to a maximum  earnings limit imposed by the federal tax laws. The
maximum annual contribution credit for 2002 is $10,000. In addition, interest is
credited daily on the cash balance in each participant's  account.  Once vested,
generally after five years of service,  a participant is entitled to the amounts
in his or her account when he or she leaves LP. The estimated annual  retirement
income payable as a single life annuity at normal retirement at age 65, assuming
no change in the maximum  earnings limit and an


                                      -23-


interest crediting rate of 5.12 percent, for the executive officers named in the
Summary  Compensation  Table above as of December 31, 2001,  is as follows:  Mr.
Suwyn, $693; Mr. Stevens,  $2,076;  Mr. Matheney,  $1,448; Mr. Tull, $1,098; and
Mr.  Wirfs,  $1,288.  Payment  may  also be in a lump sum or  pursuant  to other
arrangements.  The  Retirement  Account  Plan does not provide for an offset for
Social Security benefits.

         Pursuant to Mr. Suwyn's employment agreement with LP, he is entitled to
a  nonqualified  supplemental  executive  retirement  benefit  in  which  he  is
immediately  vested to the extent accrued in lieu of  participating in the SERP.
The  annual  retirement  benefit  payable  to  Mr.  Suwyn  under  the  agreement
(calculated  as a  single  life  annuity  reduced  on  an  actuarial  basis  for
retirement  prior  to  age  62) is  equal  to an  amount  based  on Mr.  Suwyn's
compensation   (salary  plus  annual  bonus)  for  the  year  during  the  three
consecutive  calendar  years prior to  termination of employment in which he had
the highest compensation (including with his previous employer),  with a maximum
annual benefit equal to 50% of such compensation (less a Social Security offset)
and a minimum  annual  benefit  equal to 25% of such  compensation.  The  annual
benefit so  calculated  will be  reduced by an amount  equal to the value of the
benefits payable to Mr. Suwyn pursuant to the retirement plans maintained by his
prior employer and LP. In the event of a change in control of LP, Mr. Suwyn will
be entitled to two  additional  years of service for  purposes of the  foregoing
benefit.  If Mr.  Suwyn  were  to  retire  on  December  31,  2002,  the  annual
supplemental retirement benefit payable by LP, without any reductions,  pursuant
to the provisions of the agreement is estimated to be $376,000.  See "Agreements
with Executive Officers."

Management Loans and Other Transactions

         In  November  1999,  the  subcommittee  of the  Compensation  Committee
approved an  Executive  Loan Program  under which up to 1,700,000  shares of the
Common Stock were offered by LP for purchase  prior to January 23, 2000, by LP's
executive officers,  Business Team Leaders,  and other executives  designated by
its  chief  executive  officer.  In  November  2000,  the  subcommittee  of  the
Compensation  Committee  authorized  additional  loans under the Executive  Loan
Program during the 60-day period which ended January 23, 2001. Participants were
permitted to borrow up to 100 percent of the purchase  price of the shares to be
purchased,  which was equal to the closing  price of the Common Stock on the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on the date of delivery of an election to participate
to LP. The maximum  amount an individual was permitted to borrow was three times
his or her annual base pay.  The loans bear  interest at the annual rate of 6.02
percent.

     Interest  and  principal  are due and payable at the earlier of January 23,
2006,  or  30  days  following  the   executive's   resignation  or  involuntary
termination  of  employment.  The loans are  unsecured.  With  respect  to loans
outstanding on or entered into after November 24, 2000, if the executive remains
continuously  employed by LP through the  following  dates,  the loan balance at
that date will be forgiven in the  following  percentages:  January 23, 2004, 50
percent of the original principal; January 23, 2005, an additional 25 percent of
the principal plus 50 percent of the accrued interest; and January 23, 2006, all
remaining  principal  and  accrued  interest.   If  an  executive's   employment
terminates due to death, disability,  or termination by LP without cause, his or
her loan is forgiven in a prorated  amount of the  percentages  specified  above
based on the amount of time elapsed since  January 23, 2001.  If an  executive's
employment is terminated after November 2, 2001, by reason of death, disability,
involuntary  termination by LP without cause or termination by the executive for
good  reason  following  a change in control of LP, an amount of  original  loan
principal equal to the excess of the executive's  cost basis in shares of Common
Stock  purchased  under the program over the fair market value of such shares on
the  employment  termination  date  (to the  extent  such  amount  exceeds  loan
forgiveness  amounts under the program's other  provisions plus any amounts paid
as severance  based on losses under the  program),  together with 100 percent of
the executive's  accrued loan interest,  will be forgiven.  In addition,  if the
Common Stock has traded on the NYSE for at least five  consecutive  trading days
at  specified  price  levels or above  during the  12-month  period  immediately
preceding January 23, 2004 or 2005 and the executive remains employed by LP, the
following additional  percentages of the loan balance will be forgiven:  January
23, 2004, 25 percent of the

                                       -24-


principal and 50 percent of the accrued  interest at a price level of $16.00 per
share or 50 percent of the principal and 100 percent of the accrued  interest at
a price level of $20.00 per share; and January 23, 2005, all remaining principal
and accrued  interest at a price level of $18.00 per share.  No amount of a loan
will be forgiven if the executive does not still own, as of the applicable date,
all shares purchased under the Executive Loan Program.

         The following table provides information regarding loans made under the
Executive Loan Program to persons who were executive officers of LP during 2001.
The loan  amounts  shown  include the original  principal  amount and the amount
outstanding  (including accrued interest) at March 8, 2002, which is the highest
amount outstanding since January 1, 2001.


                                 Original Loan      Share          No. of          Balance
         Name                       Amount          Price          Shares          at 3/8/02
         ----                      --------         -----          ------          ---------
                                                                     
         J. Ray Barbee.....       $ 599,991        $13.625         44,036        $        0(1)
         F. Jeff Duncan....         542,191         13.000         41,707           614,253
         Warren C. Easley..         349,994         11.625         30,107                 0(1)
         Richard W. Frost..         599,990         11.625         51,612           685,454
         M. Ward Hubbell...         416,803         11.625         35,854           476,173
         Joseph B. Kastelic         399,989         13.625         29,357           456,665
         J. Keith Matheney.         688,491         11.625         59,225           786,561
         Elizabeth T. Smith         399,993          8.625         46,376                 0(1)
         Curtis M. Stevens.         719,994         11.625         61,935           822,552
         Mark A. Suwyn.....       2,141,999         11.625        184,258         2,447,112
         Michael J. Tull...         656,999         11.625         56,516           750,583
         Gary C. Wilkerson.         854,996         11.625         73,548                 0(1)
         Walter M. Wirfs...         569,997         11.625         49,032           651,189

-----------------


(1)   The highest  amounts  outstanding  during 2001 prior to  repayment  of any
      unforgiven  amounts of the loans following  termination of employment were
      as follows:  Mr.  Barbee,  $652,644;  Mr.  Easley,  $395,478;  Ms.  Smith,
      $408,325; and Mr. Wilkerson, $966,108.

         Terry Simpson, the son of one of LP's directors,  Lee C. Simpson, is an
employee of LP and received compensation totaling $150,955 during 2001.

         During 2001, LP used,  and is continuing to use during 2002,  the legal
services of Jones,  Day,  Reavis & Pogue,  of which Mr. McCartan is the managing
partner.

Directors' Compensation

         Each  director  of LP who is not an  employee  of LP  receives  for all
services  as a director  fees at the rate of $24,000  per year,  plus $1,750 for
each board meeting and $1,000 for each  committee  meeting  attended,  including
telephone conference meetings.

         LP previously  maintained an unfunded  deferred  compensation  plan for
directors  which  allowed  outside  directors  to elect to defer  payment of any
portion of their director fees and meeting fees,  subject to a minimum  deferral
amount of $2,400 per year.  Such deferred  compensation  could be allocated at a
participating  director's  election  in a fund which  earned  interest at a rate
equal to two percentage points above Moody's Average Corporate Bond Yield Index,
adjusted  monthly,  or in a fund invested in phantom units of Common Stock.  The
plan was terminated effective December 1, 2001, and all amounts held in the plan
were distributed to the participating directors.

         LP's 1992 Non-Employee Director Stock Option Plan (the "Director Plan")
provides for the automatic grant every year (with certain exceptions) of options
to purchase  shares of Common Stock to members of the Board of Directors who are
not employees of LP or any of its  subsidiaries.  Each option  granted under

                                       -25-


the Director Plan  beginning May 1, 2000,  entitles the holder to purchase 9,000
shares of Common  Stock at a price  equal to 100% of the fair  market  value (as
defined) of a share of Common  Stock on the date of grant.  Each option  becomes
exercisable  as to 10% of the shares  covered by the option  (i.e.,  900 shares)
every three months  following  the date of grant until  vested in full.  Options
become immediately  exercisable in full upon the death of the holder or upon the
occurrence  of a change in control of LP. To the  extent  not fully  vested,  an
option  will  become  exercisable  as to an  additional  20% of shares  upon the
director's  retirement as of the first annual meeting of stockholders  after the
director  attains age 70. Each option  expires 10 years after the date of grant,
subject to earlier  termination if the holder ceases to be a member of the Board
of Directors.

         Effective  May 1,  2000,  the  Board  of  Directors  adopted  the  2000
Non-Employee Director Restricted Stock Plan, which provides for annual grants of
restricted  shares  of Common  Stock  with a market  value on the grant  date of
$20,000 to each non-employee  director of LP. The restricted shares vest in full
on the  earliest  to occur of five  years  following  the grant  date,  upon the
director's death,  disability or retirement (as defined), or a change in control
of LP. If the director  ceases to be a director before the  restrictions  lapse,
the  restricted  shares are  forfeited.  Prior to vesting,  the director has the
right to vote the shares and to receive cash dividends, if any.

Agreements with Executive Officers

         LP entered into an employment agreement with Mark A. Suwyn with respect
to his employment as LP's Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer in January 1996.
The term of the agreement presently will expire on December 31, 2002, subject to
automatic  extension  annually  unless 90 days'  prior  notice of  intention  to
terminate is given by either party.

         The  agreement  provides  that Mr.  Suwyn is entitled to a minimum base
salary of  $600,000,  subject  to annual  review  for  increase  by the Board of
Directors  beginning  in  1997,  and an  annual  bonus,  subject  to  satisfying
reasonable annual  performance goals established by the Compensation  Committee.
The agreement also provides for a nonqualified  supplemental  retirement benefit
as  described  above under  "Retirement  Benefits."  In  addition,  Mr. Suwyn is
entitled  under  the  agreement  to  participate  in  all  LP  employee  benefit
arrangements at a level commensurate with his position.

         In the event Mr. Suwyn's employment is terminated by Mr. Suwyn for Good
Reason (as defined) or by LP for any reason other than  disability  or Cause (as
defined), or if the agreement is not renewed pursuant to notice by LP, Mr. Suwyn
will be  entitled  to receive  an amount  equal to his base  salary,  as then in
effect,  for the remainder of the term of the agreement or 24 months,  whichever
is longer,  plus a pro rata cash  incentive  payment for the year of termination
and certain continued  medical  benefits.  He will also be entitled to all other
amounts and benefits in which he is then or thereby becomes vested.

         If a Change in Control occurs (as defined) and Mr.  Suwyn's  employment
terminates  (including  voluntarily  by Mr.  Suwyn)  during the 13-month  period
following the Change in Control other than for Cause or by death or  disability,
Mr.  Suwyn will be entitled to receive,  in addition to all amounts and benefits
in which he is vested,  an amount equal to his base  salary,  as then in effect,
for the  remainder  of the term of the  agreement  or 24  months,  whichever  is
longer, together with (i) a pro rata share of the targeted annual cash incentive
award for the year in which such termination  occurs;  (ii) a bonus equal to two
times the targeted annual cash incentive award, if any, for such year payable in
24 equal monthly installments; and (iii) employee welfare benefits substantially
similar to those which he was receiving immediately prior to such termination.

         For  purposes  of the  agreement,  a "Change in Control" of LP includes
certain  extraordinary  corporate  transactions  pursuant  to which  less than a
majority of the combined  voting power in LP remains in the hands of the holders
immediately  prior to such  transactions,  a person or group (other than certain
persons  related  to LP)  becomes  the  beneficial  owner  of 25% or more of the
combined voting power in LP, or, with certain exceptions, the existing directors
of LP cease to constitute a majority of the Board of

                                       -26-


Directors. "Cause" includes continuing to fail to devote substantially all one's
business  time to LP's  business  and  affairs,  engaging in certain  activities
competitive with LP, or the commission of specified wrongful acts. "Good Reason"
includes failure to maintain Mr. Suwyn as Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer,
a reduction  in base salary or the  termination  or  reduction  of any  employee
benefits,  certain extraordinary corporate transactions,  certain relocations of
Mr. Suwyn's place of work, or any material breach of the agreement by LP.

         If any payment  under the  agreement is determined to be subject to the
federal excise tax imposed on benefits that constitute excess parachute payments
under the Internal Revenue Code, Mr. Suwyn will be entitled to reimbursement for
such taxes on an after-tax basis.

         LP has  entered  into  Change of  Control  Employment  Agreements  (the
"Employment  Agreements") with all of its current executive officers,  including
each of the executive  officers named in the Summary  Compensation  Table above.
The Employment  Agreements  provide for severance  compensation  in the event of
termination of employment  following a change of control of LP. Each  Employment
Agreement has a term of three years subject to automatic  extension annually for
one  additional  year unless notice of nonrenewal is given by November 26 of the
current  year.  Also, if a change of control of LP occurs during the term of the
Employment  Agreements,  the  term  will be  extended  automatically  for  three
additional calendar years beyond the date on which the change of control occurs.

         The Employment  Agreements  further provide that if, within three years
following the occurrence of a change of control, an executive's  employment with
LP is terminated by LP other than for cause or by the executive for good reason,
the  executive  will be  entitled  to  receive  (i) his or her full base  salary
through  the date of  termination  (which  must be at least equal to the highest
rate in effect  during  the 12 months  prior to the date the  change of  control
occurred) plus a pro rata amount of the executive's  target bonus for the fiscal
year in which the change of  control  occurred  (the  "Target  Bonus"),  (ii) an
amount equal to three times the sum of (x) his or her annual base salary at such
rate plus (y) his or her Target Bonus,  and (iii) the difference,  calculated on
an actuarial  present value basis,  between the  retirement  benefits that would
have accrued if the  executive's  employment  continued for an additional  three
years and the actual vested benefit, if any, at the date of termination. Special
payment  provisions  apply in the event of the  executive's  death or disability
following a change of control.

         The Employment  Agreements also provide for reimbursement of legal fees
and expenses and for  outplacement  services and for the continuation of health,
disability and life insurance benefits for three years following  termination of
employment  voluntarily for good reason or involuntarily other than for cause or
disability.  Each Employment  Agreement also provides for  reimbursement for any
excise tax imposed on benefits that constitute  excess  parachute  payments plus
any  related  federal,  state and local  income  taxes,  subject to a "cut back"
provision  providing  for a  reduction  in the  payments  under  the  Employment
Agreement  if the amount that would be treated as excess  parachute  payments is
not greater than 110% of the maximum  amount that could be paid to the executive
without imposition of any excise tax.

         Complete  definitions  of cause,  change of control and good reason are
included in the Employment  Agreements.  Brief  summaries of the definitions are
set forth below.

         "Cause" means (i) the willful and continued failure of the executive to
perform  substantially  his or her duties after delivery of a written demand for
substantial performance or (ii) the willful engaging by the executive in illegal
conduct or gross misconduct that is materially and demonstrably injurious to LP,
in each case  pursuant to a  resolution  adopted by the  affirmative  vote of at
least three-fourths of the entire membership of the Board of Directors.

         "Change of control"  means (i) the  acquisition by a person or group of
beneficial  ownership  of  20%  of  LP's  outstanding  Common  Stock  or  voting
securities,  with certain  exceptions,  (ii) a change in the  composition of the
Board of Directors  such that the  incumbent  directors  cease to  constitute at
least a

                                       -27-


majority of the Board  (including,  for purposes of computing a majority,  those
persons nominated for election by a majority of the then incumbent directors who
had been similarly  nominated),  (iii) consummation of certain  reorganizations,
mergers,  consolidations  or sale of substantially all the assets of LP, or (iv)
approval by LP's stockholders of a complete liquidation or dissolution of LP.

         "Good reason" with respect to the  termination by an employee of his or
her employment with LP means (i) subject to certain  exceptions,  the assignment
of duties inconsistent with the executive's position,  (ii) any failure by LP to
comply with the  compensation  provisions  of the  Employment  Agreement,  (iii)
transfer  of the  executive  to a location  more than 25 miles from the  present
location, or (iv) any purported termination by LP of the executive's  employment
otherwise than as expressly permitted by the Employment Agreement. A termination
of employment by the executive  during the 30-day period  immediately  following
the first  anniversary  of the change of control is deemed to be for good reason
for purposes of the Employment Agreements.

         A management  restructuring  severance package for senior management in
which  the  executive  officers  named in the  Summary  Compensation  Table  are
eligible to participate was in place during 2001 and will continue in effect for
2002.  Under the  severance  arrangement,  in the event an  executive  officer's
position is eliminated as a result of  management  restructuring,  the executive
will be entitled to receive a lump sum cash  payment  equal to the sum of (1) 15
months of current base pay, (2) an amount equal to the  actuarial  present value
of the  executive's  accrued benefit under the SERP computed as if the executive
had completed five years of  participation  in the SERP, and (3) an amount equal
to the  present  value of 15  months  of  COBRA  health  insurance  continuation
premiums.  Outplacement  services  will also be made  available  for a six-month
period following termination.


                              STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

         Any stockholder who intends to present a proposal at the Annual Meeting
of Stockholders  of LP in 2003, and who wishes to have the proposal  included in
LP's  proxy  materials  for that  meeting,  must  deliver  the  proposal  to the
Corporate  Secretary of LP no later than  November 25, 2002.  Any such  proposal
must meet the  informational  and other  requirements set forth in the rules and
regulations  of the SEC in order  to be  eligible  for  inclusion  in the  proxy
materials for that meeting.

         LP's bylaws also  provide  that no  business  may be brought  before an
annual  meeting except as specified in the notice of the meeting or as otherwise
brought  before the meeting by or at the  direction of the Board of Directors or
by a  stockholder  of record who has  delivered  written  notice  thereof to the
Chairman by the  deadline  specified  in the bylaws.  In the case of next year's
annual  meeting,  this notice  must be received by LP no later than  February 8,
2003. Such notice must include the  information  required by the SEC's rules for
stockholder  proposals  presented  for  inclusion in LP's proxy  materials.  The
meeting chairman may, if the facts warrant, determine that any such business was
not properly brought before the meeting and so declare to the meeting,  in which
case such business shall not be transacted.


                RELATIONSHIP WITH INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

         The Board of Directors has appointed Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent
public  accountants,  to examine the  financial  statements  of LP for 2002.  LP
expects  representatives  of the  accounting  firm to be  present  at the annual
meeting  and  to  be  available  to  respond  to   appropriate   questions  from
stockholders.  The accountants  will have the opportunity to make a statement at
the annual meeting if they desire to do so.

                                       -28-



         The aggregate  fees,  including  expenses,  billed by Deloitte & Touche
LLP,  the  member  firms of  Deloitte  Touche  Tohmatsu,  and  their  respective
affiliates (collectively, "Deloitte & Touche"), for services during 2001 were as
follows:

         Audit Fees                                                  $758,790(1)
                                                                      =======

         Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation Fees      -0-

         All Other Fees:

              Audit-Related Services                                  108,924(2)

              Non-Audit Services                                      269,159(3)
                                                                      -------

                    Total of All Other Fees                          $378,083(4)
                                                                      =======
---------------

(1)  Audit fees  represent  aggregate fees billed to LP by Deloitte & Touche for
     professional  services  rendered  for the  audit of LP's  annual  financial
     statements  for the year  ended  December  31,  2001,  their  review of the
     financial  statements  included in LP's quarterly  reports on Form 10-Q for
     that year, and  consultation on issues  regarding U.S.  generally  accepted
     accounting principles related to items included in the financial statements
     for that year.

(2)  Audit-related  services  primarily  include  issuance of comfort letters to
     underwriters.

(3)  Non-audit services primarily include tax services.

(4)  The Audit  Committee has  considered  and  concluded  that the provision of
     these  services to LP is compatible  with  maintaining  Deloitte & Touche's
     independence.

                                     GENERAL

         The cost of soliciting  proxies will be borne by LP. In addition to the
solicitation  of  proxies  by the use of the  mails,  some of the  officers  and
regular  employees  of LP,  without  extra  compensation,  may  solicit  proxies
personally or by other means such as telephone, telecopier, or e-mail.

         LP will request brokers,  dealers,  banks,  voting trustees,  and their
nominees who hold Common Stock of record to forward  soliciting  material to the
beneficial owners of such stock and will reimburse such record holders for their
reasonable  expenses in  forwarding  material.  LP has retained D.F. King & Co.,
Inc.,  to assist  in such  solicitation  for an  estimated  fee of  $9,500  plus
reimbursement for certain expenses.



                                       -29-


                                                                      APPENDIX A
                          LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION
                         1997 INCENTIVE STOCK AWARD PLAN

                      ARTICLE 1. ESTABLISHMENT AND PURPOSE

      1.1 ESTABLISHMENT.  LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION ("Corporation"),  hereby
establishes the  Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation  1997 Incentive Stock Award Plan
(the "Plan"),  effective as of March 1, 1997, subject to stockholder approval as
provided in Article 15.

      1.2 PURPOSE. The purpose of the Plan is to promote the long-term interests
of Corporation and its stockholders by enabling Corporation to attract,  retain,
and reward key employees of Corporation and its  subsidiaries  and to strengthen
the   mutuality  of  interests   between  such   employees   and   Corporation's
stockholders.  The Plan is  designed  to serve this  purpose by  offering  stock
options and other  equity-based  incentive awards and encourage key employees to
acquire an ownership in Corporation.

                             ARTICLE 2. DEFINITIONS

      2.1 DEFINED TERMS. The following definitions are applicable to the Plan:

     "AWARD" means an award or grant made to a Participant pursuant to the Plan.

     "AWARD  AGREEMENT"  means an  agreement  as described in Section 6.2 of the
Plan.

     "BOARD" means the Board of Directors of Corporation.

     "CODE"  means the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended and in effect
from time to time, or any successor thereto,  together with rules,  regulations,
and interpretations  promulgated thereunder.  Where the context so requires, any
reference  to a  particular  Code  section  will be  construed  to  refer to the
successor provision to such Code section.

     "COMMITTEE" means the Compensation Committee of the Board.

     "COMMON STOCK" means the common stock,  $1 par value, of Corporation or any
security of Corporation issued in substitution, exchange, or lieu thereof.

     "CORPORATION" means Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation, a Delaware corporation,
or any successor corporation thereto.

     "EXCHANGE ACT" means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

     "FAIR MARKET VALUE" means on any given date, the closing price per share of
Common  Stock as  reported  for such day by the  principal  exchange  or trading
market on which Common Stock is traded (as  determined by the  Committee) or, if
Common  Stock was not traded on such date,  on the next  preceding  day on which
Common Stock was traded.  If the Common Stock is not listed on a stock  exchange
or if trading  activities  for Common  Stock are not  reported,  the Fair Market
Value will be determined by the Committee.

      "PARTICIPANT"  means an employee of  Corporation  or a  Subsidiary  who is
granted an Award under the Plan.

      "PLAN" means this Louisiana-Pacific Corporation 1997 Incentive Stock Award
Plan, as set forth herein and as it may be hereafter amended from time to time.

      "SHARE" means a share of Common Stock.

      "SUBSIDIARY"  means  any  corporation  in which  Corporation  directly  or
indirectly controls 50 percent or more of the total combined voting power of all
classes of stock having voting power.

                                       A-1


      "VEST" or "VESTED" means:

      (a) In the case of an Award  that  requires  exercise,  to be or to become
immediately and fully exercisable and free of all restrictions;

      (b) In the case of an Award  that is subject  to  forfeiture,  to be or to
become nonforfeitable, freely transferable, and free of all restrictions;

      (c) In the case of an Award  that is  required  to be earned by  attaining
specified  performance  goals,  to be or to become  earned  and  nonforfeitable,
freely transferable, and free of all restrictions; or

      (d) In the case of any other  Award as to which  payment is not  dependent
solely upon the exercise of a right, election,  exercise, or option, to be or to
become immediately payable and free of all restrictions.

                            ARTICLE 3. ADMINISTRATION

      3.1 GENERAL. The Plan will be administered by the Committee. The Committee
will  have  full  power  and  authority  to  administer  the  Plan  in its  sole
discretion.  A majority of the members of the Committee will constitute a quorum
and action approved by a majority will be the act of the Committee.

      3.2  AUTHORITY  OF THE  COMMITTEE.  Subject to the terms of the Plan,  the
Committee:

      (a) Will  select  the  Participants,  determine  the types of Awards to be
granted to Participants,  determine the shares or share units subject to Awards,
and determine the terms and conditions of individual Award Agreements;


      (b) Has the  authority to interpret the Plan,  to  establish,  amend,  and
revoke  any  rules  and  regulations  relating  to the  Plan,  to make all other
determinations necessary or advisable for the administration of the Plan; and

      (c) May  correct  any  deficit,  supply any  omission,  or  reconcile  any
inconsistency  in the Plan or in any Award  Agreement  in the  manner and to the
extent the Committee deems desirable to carry out the purposes of the Plan.

Decisions of the  Committee,  or any delegate as permitted by the Plan,  will be
final, conclusive, and binding on all Participants.

      3.3 LIABILITY OF COMMITTEE  MEMBERS.  No member of the  Committee  will be
liable for any action or  determination  made in good faith with  respect to the
Plan, any Award, or any Participant.

         ARTICLE 4. DURATION OF THE PLAN AND SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN

      4.1 DURATION OF THE PLAN. The Plan is effective March 1, 1997,  subject to
approval by Corporation's  stockholders as provided in Article 15. The Plan will
remain in effect  until  Awards have been  granted  covering  all the  available
Shares and all outstanding Awards have been exercised, settled, or terminated in
accordance  with the terms of the  applicable  Award  Agreement,  or the Plan is
otherwise  terminated  by the  Board.  Termination  of the Plan will not  affect
outstanding Awards.

      4.2 OTHER STOCK PLANS.  The Plan is separate from the  following  existing
plans (the "Prior Plans"):

      Louisiana-Pacific Corporation 1991 Employee Stock Option Plan;
      Louisiana-Pacific Corporation 1984 Employee Stock Option Plan; and
      Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Key Employee Restricted Stock Plan.

The Plan will neither affect the operation of the Prior Plans nor be affected by
the Prior Plans, except that no further stock options or restricted stock awards
will be granted under any of the Prior Plans after the date the Plan is approved
by Corporation's stockholders as described in Article 15.

                                       A-2


      4.3   GENERAL  LIMITATION ON AWARDS.  Subject to adjustment  pursuant to
Article 12 of the Plan,  the maximum  number of Shares for which Awards may be
granted under the Plan may not exceed 10,000,000 Shares.

      4.4   CANCELLATION  OR EXPIRATION OF AWARDS.  If an Award under the Plan
is  canceled or expires  for any reason  prior to having been fully  vested or
exercised  by a  Participant  or is  settled  in cash in lieu of  Shares or is
exchanged  for other  Awards,  all Shares  covered by such  Awards  will again
become available for additional Awards under the Plan.

                             ARTICLE 5. ELIGIBILITY

      Officers  and other key  employees  of  Corporation  and its  Subsidiaries
(including  employees who may also be directors of  Corporation or a Subsidiary)
who, in the Committee's  judgment,  are or will be contributors to the long-term
success of Corporation will be eligible to receive Awards under the Plan.

                              ARTICLE 6. AWARDS

      6.1 TYPES OF AWARDS.  Awards under the Plan may consist of: stock  options
(either incentive stock options,  within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code,
or nonstatutory stock options),  stock appreciation rights,  performance shares,
restricted stock grants,  and other stock-based  awards (as described in Article
11 of the Plan).  Awards of performance  shares and restricted stock may provide
the Participant  with dividends or dividend  equivalents and voting rights prior
to vesting.

      6.2 AWARD  AGREEMENTS.  Each Award will be  evidenced  by a written  Award
Agreement between Corporation and the Participant. Award Agreements may, subject
to the provisions of the Plan,  contain any provision approved by the Committee.
Any Award  Agreement  may make  provision  for any  matter  that is  within  the
discretion of the Committee or may retain the Committee's  discretion to approve
or  authorize  any action with respect to the Award during the term of the Award
Agreement.

      6.3 NONUNIFORM  DETERMINATIONS.  The Committee's  determinations under the
Plan or under one or more Award Agreements,  including without  limitation,  (a)
the selection of Participants to receive Awards, (b) the type, form, amount, and
timing of Awards, (c) the terms of specific Award Agreements,  and (d) elections
and determinations made by the Committee with respect to exercise or payments of
Awards,  need not be uniform and may be made by the Committee  selectively among
Participants and Awards, whether or not Participants are similarly situated.

      6.4  PROVISIONS  GOVERNING  ALL AWARDS.  All Awards will be subject to the
following provisions:

      (a) TRANSFERABILITY.  Except as otherwise provided in this Section 6.4(a),
each Award (but not Shares  issued  following  Vesting or  exercise of an Award)
will  not be  transferable  other  than  by  will or the  laws  of  descent  and
distribution  and  Awards  requiring  exercise  will be  exercisable  during the
lifetime  of the  Participant  only by the  Participant  or,  in the  event  the
Participant becomes legally incompetent,  by the Participant's guardian or legal
representative. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee, in its discretion,
may include in any Award  Agreement a provision that the Award is  transferable,
without payment of consideration, to immediate family members of the Participant
or to a trust for the benefit of or a partnership composed solely of such family
members.

      (b)   EMPLOYMENT  RIGHTS.  Neither  the  adoption  of the  Plan  nor the
granting  of any Award  will  confer  on any  person  the  right to  continued
employment with  Corporation or any  Subsidiary,  nor will it interfere in any
way with the right of

Corporation  or a Subsidiary to terminate  such person's  employment at any time
for any reason, with or without cause.

      (c) EFFECT OF CHANGE IN CONTROL.  The  Committee  may, in its  discretion,
include in any Award  Agreement a provision  that upon the  effective  date of a
change in  control  of  Corporation  (as that term may be  defined  in the Award
Agreement),  all or a  specified  portion  of the  Award (i) will  become  fully


                                       A-3


Vested,  (ii)  will  terminate,  or (iii)  may be  converted  into  shares of an
acquiror.  In any such change in control  provision,  the  Committee may provide
whether or to what extent such  acceleration  in the Vesting of an Award will be
conditioned  to avoid  resulting  in an "excess  parachute  payment"  within the
meaning of Section 280G(b) of the Code.

                            ARTICLE 7. STOCK OPTIONS

      The option price for each stock option may not be less than 100 percent of
the Fair Market  Value of the Common Stock on the date of grant.  Stock  options
will be  exercisable  for such  period  as  specified  by the  Committee  in the
applicable  Award  Agreement,  but in no event may options be exercisable  for a
period of more than ten years  after  their date of grant.  The option  price of
each Share as to which a stock option is  exercised  must be paid in full at the
time of exercise.  The Committee  may, in its  discretion,  provide in any Award
Agreement  for a stock  option that  payment of the option  price may be made in
cash, by tender of Shares owned by the  Participant  valued at Fair Market Value
as of the date of exercise,  subject to such guidelines for the tender of Shares
as the Committee may  establish,  in such other  consideration  as the Committee
deems  appropriate,  or a combination of cash,  shares of Common Stock, and such
other  consideration.  The  number  of  Shares  subject  to  options  and  stock
appreciation rights granted under the Plan to any individual  Participant during
any one calendar year may not exceed 600,000  Shares.  Except for adjustments in
price  pursuant  to Article 12  hereof,  at no time shall the option  price of a
stock option granted hereunder be subsequently repriced during the period of its
exercisability.

      In the case of an Option  designated  as an incentive  stock  option,  the
terms of the option and the Award  Agreement must conform with the statutory and
regulatory  requirements  specified  pursuant to Section 422 of the Code,  as in
effect on the date such incentive stock option is granted.

      The Committee may, in its  discretion,  include in an Award  Agreement for
any  option  a  provision  that in the  event  previously  acquired  Shares  are
surrendered  by a  Participant  in payment of all or a portion of either (a) the
option  exercise price or (b) the  Participant's  federal,  state,  or local tax
withholding  obligation  with respect to such  exercise,  the  Participant  will
automatically  be granted a  replacement  or reload option (with an option price
equal to the Fair Market  Value of a Share on the date of such  exercise)  for a
number of Shares equal to all or a portion of the number of Shares  surrendered.
Such  replacement  option  will be subject to such terms and  conditions  as the
Committee determines.

                      ARTICLE 8. STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS

      Stock appreciation rights may be granted in tandem with a stock option, in
addition to a stock  option,  or may be  freestanding  and  unrelated to a stock
option.  Stock  appreciation  rights granted in tandem or in addition to a stock
option may be granted  either at the same time as the stock option or at a later
time. No stock  appreciation  right may be  exercisable  earlier than six months
after grant,  except in the event of the  Participant's  death or disability.  A
stock   appreciation   right  will  entitle  the  Participant  to  receive  from
Corporation  an amount equal to the increase in the Fair Market Value of a Share
on the  exercise  of the stock  appreciation  right  over the grant  price.  The
Committee may determine in its discretion  whether the stock  appreciation right
may be settled in cash, shares, or a combination of cash and shares.

                          ARTICLE 9. PERFORMANCE SHARES

     9.1 GENERAL. Performance shares may be granted in the form of actual Shares
or Share units having a value equal to Shares.  An Award of  performance  shares
will be granted to a Participant  subject to such terms and conditions set forth
in the Award Agreement as the Committee deems  appropriate,  including,  without
limitation,  the condition that the performance shares or a portion thereof will
Vest only in the event  specified  performance  goals are met within a specified
performance period, as set forth in the Award Agreement.  An Award Agreement for
a performance share Award may also, in addition to specifying performance goals,
condition Vesting of such Award on continued employment for a period

                                       A-4


specified  in the Award  Agreement.  In the event  that a stock  certificate  is
issued in respect of performance  shares,  the certificate will be registered in
the name of the Participant  but will be held by Corporation  until the time the
performance shares become Vested.  The performance  conditions and the length of
the performance  period will be determined by the Committee.  The Committee may,
in its discretion,  reduce or eliminate the Vesting of performance shares if, in
the  Committee's  judgment,  it determines  that the Vesting of the  performance
share Award is not  appropriate  given actual  performance  over the  applicable
performance  period.  The maximum  number of Shares  issuable to any  individual
Participant  with respect to  performance  share Awards  during any one calendar
year may not exceed 100,000 Shares. The Committee,  in its sole discretion,  may
provide in an Award Agreement whether  performance shares granted in the form of
share units will be paid in cash, shares, or a combination of cash and shares.

     9.2 PERFORMANCE  GOALS FOR EXECUTIVE  OFFICERS.  The performance  goals for
performance share awards granted to executive officers of Corporation may relate
to corporate performance, business unit performance, or a combination of both.

     Corporate  performance  goals will be based on financial  performance goals
related to the performance of Corporation as a whole and may include one or more
measures  related  to  earnings,   profitability,   efficiency,   or  return  to
stockholders such as earnings per share, operating profit, stock price, costs of
production, or other measures.

     Business unit performance goals will be based on a combination of financial
goals and strategic goals related to the  performance of an identified  business
unit for which a Participant has responsibility.  Strategic goals for a business
unit may include one or a combination of objective  factors  relating to success
in  implementing   strategic  plans  or  initiatives,   introductory   products,
constructing facilities, or other identifiable objectives. Financial goals for a
business  unit may include the degree to which the business unit achieves one or
more  objective  measures  related  to its  revenues,  earnings,  profitability,
efficiency, operating profit, costs of production, or other measures.

     Any corporate or business  unit goals may be expressed as absolute  amounts
or as ratios or percentages.  Success may be measured against various standards,
including  budget  targets,  improvement  over prior  periods,  and  performance
relative to other companies, business units, or industry groups.

                          ARTICLE 10. RESTRICTED STOCK

      Restricted stock may be granted in the form of actual Shares,  Share units
having a value equal to Shares, or other rights to receive Shares in the future.
A restricted  stock Award will be subject to such terms and conditions set forth
in the Award Agreement as the Committee deems  appropriate,  including,  without
limitation, restrictions on the sale, assignment, transfer, or other disposition
of such restricted stock and provisions that such restricted stock,  stock units
or  other  rights  to  receive  Shares  be  forfeited  upon  termination  of the
Participant's employment for specified reasons within a specified period of time
or upon  other  conditions,  as set  forth in the  Award  Agreement.  The  Award
Agreement  for a restricted  stock Award may also,  in addition to  conditioning
Vesting  of the Award on  continued  employment,  further  condition  Vesting on
attainment of performance goals. In the event that a stock certificate is issued
in respect of restricted  stock, such certificate will be registered in the name
of the  Participant  but will be held by the  Corporation  until  the end of the
restricted  period.  The employment  conditions and the length of the period for
vesting of restricted  stock Awards will be  established by the Committee at the
time of grant and set forth in the Award Agreement.  The Committee,  in its sole
discretion,  may provide in an Award Agreement whether  restricted stock granted
in the form of Share units will be paid in cash,  Shares,  or a  combination  of
cash and  Shares.  The  aggregate  number of shares or share  units  that may be
subject to restricted stock Awards may not exceed 2,000,000 Shares.


                                       A-5


              ARTICLE 11. OTHER STOCK-BASED AND COMBINATION AWARDS

      The  Committee  may grant other  Awards  under the Plan  pursuant to which
Shares  are or may in the  future  be  acquired,  or  Awards  denominated  in or
measured by Share equivalent units, including Awards valued using measures other
than the market  value of Shares.  For such other  stock-based  awards  that are
granted to executive  officers of Corporation and that condition Vesting of such
Awards, in whole or in part, on attaining performance goals, such Awards will be
subject  to the same  limitations  on types of  performance  goals  and the same
limitation  on  the  maximum  number  of  Shares   issuable  to  any  individual
Participant  as provided in Article 9 of the Plan.  The Committee may also grant
Awards under the Plan in tandem or combination  with other Awards or in exchange
for Awards,  or in tandem or combination  with, or as alternatives to, grants or
rights under any other employee plan of Corporation.

             ARTICLE 12. ADJUSTMENTS UPON CHANGES IN CAPITALIZATION

      In the event of any change in capitalization affecting the Common Stock of
Corporation,  such as a stock dividend, stock split,  recapitalization,  merger,
consolidation,  split-up,  spinoff,  combination or exchange of shares, or other
form of reorganization, or corporate change, or any distribution with respect to
Common Stock other than  regular cash  dividends,  the  Committee  may make such
substitution  or  adjustment,  if any,  that it deems to be  equitable as to the
number and kind of Shares or other  securities  issued or reserved  for issuance
pursuant  to  the  Plan,  to  the  limits  on  Awards  to  Participants,  and to
outstanding Awards.

                      ARTICLE 13. AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION

      The Board may amend,  suspend, or terminate the Plan or any portion of the
Plan at any time, provided no amendment may be made without stockholder approval
if such  approval  is  required  by  applicable  law or the  requirements  of an
applicable stock exchange.

                            ARTICLE 14. MISCELLANEOUS

      14.1 TAX  WITHHOLDING.  Corporation will have the right to deduct from any
settlement  of any Award under the Plan,  including  the  delivery or vesting of
Shares,  any federal,  state,  or local taxes of any kind  required by law to be
withheld  with  respect to such  payments or to take such other action as may be
necessary  in the  opinion of  Corporation  to satisfy all  obligations  for the
payment of such taxes.  The recipient of any payment or  distribution  under the
Plan must make arrangements  satisfactory to Corporation for the satisfaction of
any such withholding tax  obligations.  Corporation will not be required to make
any such  payment or  distribution  under the Plan until  such  obligations  are
satisfied. The Committee, in its discretion, may permit a Participant to satisfy
the Participant's federal,  state, or local tax, or tax withholding  obligations
with  respect  to an Award by having  Corporation  retain  the  number of Shares
having a Fair Market Value equal to the amount of taxes or withholding taxes.

      14.2 SECURITIES LAW RESTRICTIONS.  No Shares will be issued under the Plan
unless  counsel for  Corporation  is  satisfied  that such  issuance  will be in
compliance with applicable  federal and state securities laws.  Certificates for
Shares delivered under the Plan may be subject to such stop-transfer  orders and
other  restrictions  as the  Committee  may  deem  advisable  under  the  rules,
regulations,  and other requirements of the Securities and Exchange  Commission,
any  stock  exchange  upon  which  the  Common  Stock  is then  listed,  and any
applicable  federal or state securities law. The Committee may cause a legend or
legends to be put on any such certificates to make appropriate reference to such
restrictions.

      14.3  GOVERNING  LAW.  Except with  respect to  references  to the Code or
federal  securities  laws,  the Plan and all actions  taken  thereunder  will be
governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the state of Oregon.


                                       A-6


                        ARTICLE 15. STOCKHOLDER APPROVAL

      The  adoption  of the Plan  and the  grant of  Awards  under  the Plan are
expressly  subject to the  approval  of the Plan by the  affirmative  vote of at
least a majority of the stockholders of Corporation  present,  or represented by
proxy,   and  entitled  to  vote  at   Corporation's   1997  annual  meeting  of
stockholders.


                                       A-7

                                                                      APPENDIX B

                          LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION
                           FINANCE AND AUDIT COMMITTEE

                                     CHARTER


I.    COMPOSITION OF COMMITTEE

      A. NUMBER OF MEMBERS. The Finance and Audit Committee (the "Committee") of
the Board of Directors  (the "Board") of  Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation  ("LP")
shall consist of not less than three directors appointed by the Board. The Board
may also  appoint  an  alternate  member  to act in the  place of any  absent or
disqualified  member,  provided  that  the  Committee  as  constituted  with the
alternate  acting in place of such absent or disqualified  member  satisfies the
requirements of 1.B below. The Board shall appoint a Chairman of the Committee.

      B.    QUALIFICATION.

      1. Subject to 1.B.5 below, no Committee  member may be a current or former
officer  or  employee  of  LP  or  any  of  its   subsidiaries   and  affiliates
(collectively, the "Company").

      2. Each member of the Committee  must be independent of management and the
Company and be free from any  relationship  that may interfere with the exercise
of independent judgment as a Committee member. In determining independence,  the
Board will observe the  requirements of Paragraphs  303.01 and 303.02 of the New
York Stock Exchange Listed Company Manual.

      3. Each  member of the  Committee  must be  financially  literate  or must
become financially literate within a reasonable period of time after appointment
to the Committee. The Board will determine, in its business judgment,  whether a
director meets the financial literacy requirement.

      4. The  Committee  shall  include at least one member with  accounting  or
related financial management  experience and expertise,  and each member must be
able to read and understand financial statements.  The Board will determine,  in
its business judgment, whether a director meets the foregoing requirements.

      5. One director who was formerly an officer or employee of the Company may
serve on the  Committee,  but only if the standards set forth in I.B.2,  3 and 4
above are met and the Board determines in its business  judgment that membership
on the  Committee  by the  individual  is required by the best  interests of the
Company and its shareholders.

II.   MEETINGS OF THE COMMITTEE

      A. REGULAR  MEETINGS.  The Committee shall hold at least two  face-to-face
meetings per year. The Chairman of the Committee will, in consultation  with the
other members of the Committee,  LP's  independent  auditors and the appropriate
officers of LP, be responsible  for calling such meetings,  establishing  agenda
therefor and supervising the conduct thereof.

      B. SPECIAL  MEETINGS.  Special  face-to-face or telephone  meetings may be
called at any time by the  Chairman of the  Committee  or any two members of the
Committee.  The person or persons  calling any such meeting shall  establish the
agenda  therefor,  and the Chairman of the Committee shall supervise the conduct
thereof.

      C.  MINUTES.  The  Committee  shall keep  minutes  of all of its  meetings
showing all matters  considered by it and the actions taken  thereon,  and shall
submit a report of such meetings at the next regular meeting of the Board.

                                       B-1


III.  RESPONSIBILITIES AND FUNCTIONS OF THE COMMITTEE

      A.  RESPONSIBILITIES.  The Committee  shall be  responsible  to assist the
Board in  fulfilling  its  oversight  responsibilities  relating to internal and
external audit  functions and its financial  reporting,  accounting and internal
control  systems.  The Committee shall annually review and reassess the adequacy
of  the   Committee's   charter.   While  the   Committee  has  the  powers  and
responsibilities  set forth in this charter, it is not the responsibility of the
Committee  to plan  or  conduct  audits  or to  determine  that  LP's  financial
statements  are  complete  and  accurate  or are in  compliance  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles,  which is the responsibility of management and
the independent auditor. Likewise, it is not the responsibility of the Committee
to resolve disputes, if any, between management and the independent auditor.

      B.  FUNCTIONS - AUDIT  MATTERS.  With respect to matters  relating to LP's
independent auditor and LP's internal audit function, the Committee shall:

      1. Approve, and recommend to the Board for its approval,  the selection of
the  independent  auditor to be employed  to perform  the annual  audits of LP's
financial  statements and reviews of LP's  financial,  accounting,  auditing and
internal   control  systems.   The  independent   auditor  shall  be  ultimately
accountable to the Committee and the Board and shall have unrestricted access to
the Committee and the Board. The Committee and the Board shall have the ultimate
authority and responsibility to select, evaluate and, where appropriate, replace
the independent  auditor (or to nominate the independent  auditor to be proposed
for shareholder approval in any proxy statement of LP).

      2. Ensure that the independent  auditor submits on a periodic basis to the
Committee a formal written statement  delineating all relationships  between the
auditor and the  Company.  The  Committee  shall  discuss  with the  independent
auditor any disclosed  relationships or services that may impact the objectivity
and independence of the auditor and shall be responsible for  recommending  that
the Board take  appropriate  action in  response  to the  independent  auditor's
report to satisfy itself of the auditor's independence.

      3.  Periodically  meet with the independent  auditor to review and discuss
the results of its audits and reviews described in III.B.1 above, to discuss any
disputes  with  management  that may have arisen in  connection  with the annual
audit  process,  and to review and approve in advance  annual audit plans of the
independent auditor for LP including the compensation to be paid therefor.

      4. Prepare an annual report of the Committee, for inclusion in LP's annual
proxy statement, stating whether the Committee has:

      o  reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements with management

      o  discussed  with the  independent  auditor  the  matters  required to be
         discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61, and discussed with
         the independent auditor the independent auditor's independence

      o  received the written  disclosures  and the letter from the  independent
         auditor required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1

      o  based upon the  foregoing,  recommended  to the Board that the  audited
         financial statements be included in LP's Annual Report on Form 10-K for
         the last fiscal year

      5. Require that the independent  auditor review the financial  information
in LP's  Quarterly  Reports on Form 10-Q prior to filing such  reports  with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.

      6.  Require  that  appropriate  reconciliations  and  descriptions  of any
adjustments to the quarterly information  previously reported on a Form 10-Q for
any quarter be made and be reviewed by the independent auditor.

                                       B-2


      7.  Request  LP's  subsidiary  and  affiliated  companies  to employ  such
independent auditors (all of which shall be accountable to the Committee and the
Board) as the Committee  deems  appropriate  to audit the  respective  financial
statements of such subsidiary and affiliated companies.

      8.  Periodically  meet with  management,  which  meetings  may include the
independent  auditor,  to discuss the matters  described  in III.B.3  above.

      9.  Review  the  opinions  to be  rendered  by the  independent auditor in
connection with its audits of LP's financial statements.

      10.  Review the  effects,  if any, of proposed or  implemented  changes in
accounting and financial reporting policies on LP's financial statements.

      11. Review the scope,  coverage and objectivity of the audits performed by
LP's Internal Audit  Department and its annual internal audit plans,  and ensure
that internal auditors have unrestricted access to the Committee.

      12. Review the effectiveness of LP's internal legal compliance programs.

      13.  Perform  such other  functions as may be required by law or any legal
settlement agreement or as may be assigned to the Committee by the Board.

      C. FUNCTIONS - FINANCIAL MATTERS.  With respect to financial matters,  the
Committee shall:

      1. Make  recommendations to the Board on matters relating to the financial
affairs and  policies  of the Company  including,  without  limitation,  capital
structure issues,  dividend policy,  treasury stock purchases,  acquisitions and
divestitures,  external financing, complex financial transactions and investment
and debt policies.

      2.  Review  the  status  of  significant  legal  and tax  matters  and the
potential financial implications thereof.

      3. Review the significant accounting principles employed in LP's financial
reporting.

      4. Review in advance the  financial  results to be included in LP's Annual
Report  to  Stockholders  and  in  filings  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission.

      5. Review, prior to public release, LP's quarterly financial results.

      6. Perform such other functions as may be assigned to the Committee by the
Board.


                                       B-3


                                     PROXY
                          LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION
               PROXY SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                         FOR ANNUAL MEETING MAY 6, 2002

The undersigned  hereby  constitutes and appoints William C. Brooks,  Patrick F.
McCartan, Lee C. Simpson, Colin D. Watson, and each of them, his true and lawful
agents and proxies, each with full power of substitution,  to represent and vote
the common stock of Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation ("LP"), which the undersigned
may be entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of LP  stockholders to be held May
6, 2002, or at any adjournment thereof.


Nominees for Election as Directors:

E. Gary Cook, Paul W. Hansen, Brenda J. Lauderback



YOU ARE ENCOURAGED TO SPECIFY YOUR CHOICES BY MARKING THE  APPROPRIATE  BOXES ON
THE REVERSE SIDE.  YOU NEED NOT MARK ANY BOXES IF YOU WISH TO VOTE IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS'  RECOMMENDATIONS.  BY SIGNING ON THE REVERSE,  YOU
ACKNOWLEDGE  RECEIPT OF THE 2002 NOTICE OF ANNUAL  MEETING OF  STOCKHOLDERS  AND
ACCOMPANYING  PROXY STATEMENT AND REVOKE ALL PROXIES  HERETOFORE GIVEN BY YOU TO
VOTE AT SAID MEETING OR ANY ADJOURNMENT THEREOF.
                                                                     SEE REVERSE
                                                                         SIDE

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             DETACH AND RETURN PROXY CARD; RETAIN ADMISSION TICKET


X  Please mark your
   votes as in this
   example.

This proxy when properly  executed will be voted in the manner directed  herein.
If no direction is made,  this proxy will be voted FOR the election of directors
and FOR proposals 2 and 3.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS  AND FOR
PROPOSALS 2 AND 3.

                FOR  WITHHELD
                ---  --------
1. Election of
   Directors     //    //
   (see reverse)

FOR all nominees except as marked to the contrary below:


----------------------------------


                                                FOR    AGAINST    ABSTAIN
                                                ---    -------    -------
2. Approval of 1997 Incentive Stock             //      //          //
Award Plan, as amended.
                                                FOR    AGAINST    ABSTAIN
                                                ---    -------    -------
3. Reapproval of performance goals              //      //          //
under Annual Cash Incentive Award Plan.


                                        If  any  other  matters   properly  come
                                        before the  meeting,  this proxy will be
                                        voted by the  proxies  named  herein  in
                                        accordance with their best judgment.

SIGNATURE(S)----------------------------  DATE----------------

Note:    Please  sign  exactly  as your name  appears  hereon.  If  signing  for
         estates,  trusts, or corporations,  title or capacity should be stated.
         If shares are held jointly, each holder should sign.

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             DETACH AND RETURN PROXY CARD; RETAIN ADMISSION TICKET


[LOGO] LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION

       805 S.W. Broadway
       Portland, Oregon 97205
       (503) 821-5100

                                                  Annual Meeting of Stockholders
                                                            May 6, 2002
                                                          ADMISSION TICKET


The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Louisiana-Pacific Corporation will be held
at 9:30 a.m. on May 6, 2002,  at the Portland  Marriott  City  Center,  520 S.W.
Broadway, Portland, Oregon. Public transportation to the hotel is available from
the airport, and there is ample public parking in the vicinity of the hotel.

Your voted proxy card should be detached and returned as soon as possible in the
enclosed  postpaid  envelope.  If you plan to attend the Annual Meeting,  please
retain  this  Admission  Ticket,  and,  on May  6,  2002,  present  it to the LP
representative for admission to the meeting.


                                                            -- Anton C. Kirchhof
                                                               Secretary




                          LOUISIANA-PACIFIC CORPORATION
                        ANNUAL CASH INCENTIVE AWARD PLAN

                   Amended and Restated as of January 1, 2001

         THIS  ANNUAL  CASH  INCENTIVE  AWARD PLAN (the  "Plan")  was adopted by
Louisiana-Pacific Corporation, a Delaware corporation ("Corporation"), effective
March 1,  1997  and was  amended  as of July  31,  1999  and  January  1,  2001.
Capitalized  terms that are not otherwise  defined  herein have the meanings set
forth in Section 4.

                           SECTION 1. INCENTIVE AWARDS

         1.1  TARGET  AWARD.  Each  Award  opportunity  will  specify a targeted
incentive  opportunity (the "Target Award")  expressed either as a dollar amount
or as a percentage of a Participant's regular annualized base salary.

         1.2 INCENTIVE  AWARDS.  The amount paid for each Award will be equal to
the product of:

            (a) The Total Success  Percentage  for the  Participant for the Plan
      Year; multiplied by

            (b) The Participant's Target Award for the Plan Year.

However,  in no event may a  Participant's  Award payment for a Plan Year exceed
the  lesser  of  (i)150   percent  of  the   Participant's   Target  Award,   or
(ii)$1,250,000.

         1.3  PERFORMANCE  GOALS.  The  Goals  that  will be used to  measure  a
Participant's Award will consist of one or more of the following:

            (a) Corporate Goals measuring financial  performance  related to the
      Corporation as a whole.  Corporate  Goals may include one or more measures
      related to earnings, profitability,  efficiency, or return to stockholders
      and may include  earnings,  earnings per share,  operating  profit,  stock
      price,  costs of  production,  or other  measures,  whether  expressed  as
      absolute amounts, as ratios, or percentages of other amounts.  Success may
      be  measured   against  various   standards,   including  budget  targets,
      improvement over prior years, and performance  relative to other companies
      or industry groups.

            (b) Business Unit Goals measuring financial or strategic performance
      of an identified business unit for which a Participant has responsibility.
      Strategic  Business  Unit  Goals  may  include  one  or a  combination  of
      objective  factors related to success in  implementing  strategic plans or
      initiatives,  introducing  products,  constructing  facilities,  or  other
      identifiable  objectives.  Financial  Business  Unit Goals may include

                                      -1-


      the  degree to which  the  business  unit  achieves  one or more  measures
      related to its revenues, earnings,  profitability,  efficiency,  operating
      profit,  costs of  production,  or other  measures,  whether  expressed as
      absolute  amounts  or as ratios  or  percentages,  which  may be  measured
      against various  standards,  including  budget targets,  improvement  over
      prior  years,  and  performance  relative to other  companies  or business
      units.

            (c)   Individual   Goals   measuring   success  in  developing   and
      implementing  particular  tasks  assigned  to an  individual  Participant.
      Individual  Goals will naturally vary depending upon the  responsibilities
      of individual  Participants  and may include,  without  limitation,  goals
      related to success in developing and  implementing  particular  management
      plans  or  systems,   reorganizing   departments,   establishing  business
      relationships, or resolving identified problems.

         1.4  WEIGHTING  OF GOALS.  Each Goal will be weighted  with a Weighting
Percentage  so that  the  total  Weighting  Percentages  for all  Goals  used to
determine a Participant's Award is 100 percent.

         1.5 ACHIEVEMENT PERCENTAGE. Each Goal will also specify the Achievement
Percentages  (ranging from 0 to 150 percent) to be used in computing the payment
of an Award  based upon the  extent to which the  particular  Goal is  achieved.
Achievement Percentages for a particular Goal may be based on:

            o An  "all  or  nothing"  measure  that  provides  for  a  specified
      Achievement  Percentage  if  the  Goal  is  met,  and a  zero  Achievement
      Percentage if the Goal is not met;

            o Several levels of performance or achievement  (such as a Threshold
      Level,  a Target  Level,  and a Maximum  Level) that each  correspond to a
      specified Achievement Percentage; or

            o Continuous  or numerical  measures  that define a sliding scale of
      Achievement Percentages.

         1.6 COMPUTATION OF AWARDS.  As soon as possible after the completion of
each Plan Year, a computation will be made for each Participant of:

            o The extent to which  Goals  were  achieved  and the  corresponding
      Achievement Percentages for each Goal:

            o A  Weighted  Achievement  Percentage  for each  Goal  equal to the
      product of the  Achievement  Percentage  and the Weighting  Percentage for
      that Goal;

                                       -2-


            o The Total Success  Percentage equal to the sum of all the Weighted
      Achievement Percentages for all the Participant's Goals; and

            o An  Award  amount  equal  to  the  product  of the  Total  Success
      Percentage and the Participant's Target Award.

         1.7 RIGHT TO RECEIVE AWARD. A Participant must continue Employment with
Corporation  until the end of a Plan Year in order to be  entitled to receive an
Award for that Plan Year. Awards may be subject to such additional  requirements
regarding length of employment as may be specifically approved by the Committee.
If a Participant  terminates  Employment with Corporation  before the end of the
Plan Year for a reason other than death, Disability, or Approved Retirement, the
Participant  will  not be  entitled  to any  Award  for  that  Plan  Year.  If a
Participant  terminates  Employment with Corporation  before the end of the Plan
Year  due  to  death  or  Disability,   the  Participant  or  the  Participant's
beneficiary  or estate  will be entitled to an Award equal to 100 percent of the
Participant's  Target  Award.  If  a  Participant   terminates  Employment  with
Corporation by reason of Approved Retirement prior to the expiration of the Plan
year, the Participant will be entitled to an Award computed as follows:

            o The Total Success  Percentage will be determined  after the end of
      the Plan Year as if the  Participant  had  remained  an  Employee  for the
      entire Plan Year; and

            o The  Participant's  Award computed pursuant to Section 1.6 will be
      prorated  based on the number of days  before and the number of days after
      the effective date of the Approved Retirement.

         1.8 PAYMENT OF AWARDS. Each Participant's Award will be paid in cash in
a lump sum  within 30 days  after the  amount of the Award has been  determined.
Payment of any Award may be made  subject  to such  additional  restrictions  or
limitations,  in  addition to those  related to the  attainment  of  performance
goals, as may be expressly provided for under the Louisiana-Pacific  Corporation
Management Incentive Plan and made applicable to such Award.

                            SECTION 2. ADMINISTRATION

         For each Plan Year,  the  Committee  will approve the Target Awards for
all  Participants and will approve  Corporate Goals and Achievement  Percentages
for the Corporate  Goals.  After the end of each Plan Year,  the Committee  will
certify the extent to which the Corporate Goals have been achieved. In addition,
the  Committee  will have  exclusive  authority  to establish  Goals,  Weighting
Percentages,  and Achievement Percentages,  to certify achievement,  and to take
all other  actions  with  respect to Awards for  Corporation's  Chief  Executive
Officer and any other Participants that the Committee  determines may be subject
to Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.


                                      -3-



                            SECTION 3. MISCELLANEOUS

         3.1  NONASSIGNABILITY OF BENEFITS.  A Participant's  benefits under the
Plan cannot be sold, transferred,  anticipated, assigned, pledged, hypothecated,
seized  by legal  process,  subjected  to  claims of  creditors  in any way,  or
otherwise disposed of.

         3.2 NO RIGHT OF CONTINUED  EMPLOYMENT.  Nothing in the Plan will confer
upon any  Participant  the right to continued  Employment  with  Corporation  or
interfere in any way with the right of  Corporation  to  terminate  the person's
Employment at any time.

         3.3  AMENDMENTS  AND  TERMINATION.  The  Committee  has  the  power  to
terminate  this  Plan at any time or to amend  this  Plan at any time and in any
manner that it may deem advisable.

                             SECTION 4. DEFINITIONS

         For purposes of this Plan,  the  following  terms have the meanings set
forth in this Section 4:

         "ACHIEVEMENT  PERCENTAGE"  means a  percentage  (from 0 to 150 percent)
corresponding to a specified level of achievement or performance of a particular
Goal.

         "APPROVED  RETIREMENT" means termination of employment with an Employer
after  Participant  attains age 60, but only if such  retirement  is approved by
Corporation's Chief Executive Officer, in his sole discretion.

         "AWARD" means an incentive award under the Plan.

         "CORPORATION"   means   Louisiana-Pacific   Corporation,   a   Delaware
corporation.

         "COMMITTEE" means the Compensation Committee of the Board.

         "DISABILITY" means the condition of being permanently unable to perform
Participant's  duties  for an  Employer  by reason of a  medically  determinable
physical  or mental  impairment  that can be expected to result in death or that
has lasted or can be  expected  to last for a  continuous  period of at least 12
months.

         "EMPLOYEE AND  EMPLOYMENT"  both refer to service by  Participant  as a
full-time or part-time  employee of Corporation,  and include periods of illness
or other leaves of absence authorized by Corporation.

         "GOAL"  means one of the  elements  of  performance  used to  determine
Awards  under the Plan as  described  in  Section  1.3.

                                      -4-



         "PARTICIPANT" means an eligible employee selected to participate in the
Plan for all or a portion of a Plan Year.

         "PLAN YEAR" means a calendar year.

         "TARGET AWARD" means the targeted incentive award for a Participant for
a Plan Year as provided in Section 1.1.

         "TOTAL SUCCESS  PERCENTAGE"  means the sum of the Weighted  Achievement
Percentages for each Goal for a Participant.

         "WEIGHTED ACHIEVEMENT  PERCENTAGE" means the product of the Achievement
Percentage and the Weighting Percentage for a Goal as provided in Section 1.6.


                                       -5-