A tree is a connected 1-complex $X$ every two points $x,y$ of which can be separated by a point $z\neq x,y$. (We could let $X$ be a more general topological space here.)
Going one dimension up, call a connected 2-complex (or topological space) $X$ a 2-tree, if for every $x,y\in X$, there is a homeomorph of a forest in $X - \{x,y\}$ separating $x$ from $y$. (A forest is a disjoint union of trees.)
Question 1: Has this notion been studied?
Question 2: Is it true that a 2-complex $X$ is a 2-tree iff it contains no homeomorph of a closed surface? (The forward implication is obvious.)
Some examples of 2-trees: standard trees, graphs, $\mathbb{R}^2$, and most interestingly, cartesian products $\mathbb{R} \times T$, where T is any tree (to see this, embed $\mathbb{R} \times T$ in $\mathbb{R}^3$, and cut it with a plane separating x from y).
Examples of non-2-trees: closed surfaces, $\mathbb{R}^3$, standard Cayley complex of $\mathbb{Z}^3$ (to see the latter, notice that it contains copies of $\mathbb{S}^2$).
Remark: The definition can be applied recursively, to define $n$-trees for every $n\in \mathbb{N}$.