Nope. Nobody seems to have much interest in these materials. I thought they would be a goldmine for someone, especially for a fairly simple TD.
Many people build with solid 3/4" ply walls, then spend a lot of time prepping and painting the surface, inside and out. Or they may "float" an aluminum or plastic panel on the outside surface 'cause it seems like no one can get it to properly bond to the ply and have it stay without lifting and bulging from the surface. I would think that the floated skin would have to allow moisture behind it if the trailer is ever in a wet environment. Guess it's not a problem. I would think the 1/2" double skinned Nu-Alum (or a similar product) would be great for a 4x8 or 4x10 side-profile TD. I'd bet it would be a good bit lighter, stiffer, and more stable than finished 3/4" ply, and cheaper in the long run, at least if you pay yourself for the time and materials you spend finishing raw wood. It certainly wouldn't fill everyones' needs, but I've mentioned these specialty sign maker's materials several times on the forum and seems like I can't even get a debate going about the evils of using a product like this. Maybe this will spark it.

I'll be building a tiny travel trailer (if 12' will qualify) and am leaning very heavily toward an aluminum composite product called AlumaCorr (10mm version), manufactured by Nudo. I'll probably be insulating the walls and using AlumaCorr for my outer skin as it's very stiff for it's weight (22# for 4x8 sheet) and very weather resistant. AlumaCorr has a corrugated core that acts as a very decent thermal break between the skins, although not much of an insulator. It's also available in 4x12 sheets and that has an advantage for my size trailer, one horizontal seam at the beltline. There's also an interesting product called Polymetal (3mm version) that would do well but it's max length is 10' and I don't think I want a vertical seam in the side. Anyway, they have been great materials to work with in small test panel sizes. To be fair, I haven't built a trailer with these products but that's where I'll likely put my money when it's time for sides; else MDO ply.
http://www.alumapanel.com/subcategories.cfm?lines_id=289&step=1
J.B.