Posted on 04/08/2015 1:29:39 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A Chinese engineering firm that claims it built 10 houses in less than 24 hours last year using a 3D printer has unveiled the worlds tallest printed building.
The five-story apartment building is on display next to a 1,100-square-foot mansionalso created on a 3D printerin Suzhou Industrial Park in Jiangsu province. The mansions furniture and decorations also were made on a 6.6- by-10-meter tall printer, which uses an "ink" composed of glass fibers, steel, cement, hardening agents, and recycled construction waste to build one layer at a time for builders to assemble. The apartment building took a day to print and five days to assemble, the company says.
Global fascination
The same process that WinSun Decoration Design Engineering Co. used to create its buildings is making its way across the globe, as more engineers, architects, and builders embrace the possibility that structurally sound concrete components and other construction materialspossibly all other construction materialscan be made in minutes on an oversized printer and still comply with building codes.
In Amsterdam, architects are working on a highly designed, eco-friendly canal house that doubles as a 3D-printing museum. Hedwig Heinsman, co-founder of DUS Architects, tells Business Insider: "The main goal, I think, is really to deliver custom-made architecture."
Big ideas
At the University of Southern California, an industrial and systems engineering professor is hoping to create a 3D printer large enough to print a whole house at once rather than layer by layerincluding all electrical and plumbing conduits.
The notion that a printer can produce the components of a home or office building, or that such a structure can be completed in a matter of hours rather than in weeks or months, is still experimental. But the Chinese company says it already has orders for more than 20,000 houses and has found an American partner to build 3D homes in the U.S.
WinSun estimates that using the giant 3D printer can shave up to 60% from the cost of building materials and shorten production time by up to 70%.
Changes at hand
That, says venture capitalist Steve Sammartino, could change everything.
In an interview with ABC News in Australia, Sammartino compared the potential impact of 3D printing to the Internet. While we cant see exactly how it might manifest itself, he said of 3D printing, theres no doubt that itll change everything we do, from just simple operations and the spaces we work in. And in unforeseeable ways itll impact, I think, most businesses.
Already, consumers can buy small 3D printers for between $1,375 and $2,900 from some Home Depot locations, where shoppers can watch 3D printing demonstrations and try the devices out. Already, some in the construction industry are raising questions about whether the newfangled technology could eventually put builders out of business.
Baby steps
Despite the grandiose displays in China and Amsterdam, however, University of Minnesota building technology expert Blaine Brownell told Builder magazine that subdivisions full of printed homes are a long way off.
In a field like 3D printing there is a lot of pressure to be the first at something, but theres a big difference between being the first and actually having industry penetration and widely changing how the industry works, he told Builder.
Still, American builders are experimenting with the technology. Builder magazine points to Phoenix, AZ, design/build firm 180 degrees, which has used a 3D printer to create to-scale models of its home designs. Theres only so much you can translate through drawings, architectural designer Sherwood Wang told the magazine. Having something you can hold in your hand and flip around is good for us and for clients to use as a reference.
Brownell also said he expects product manufacturers to embrace 3D printing in the near future to make hardware, appliances, and perhaps even bricks.
Well, in Manhattan or San Francisco, 1,100 feet is pretty much a mansion. Here in Dallas/Ft Worth it’s usually a 50 year old fixer-upper.
http://www.archdaily.com/591331/chinese-company-creates-the-world-s-tallest-3d-printed-building/
You have twice this and you don’t think its a mansion? I think you’re out of touch. Its a mansion to me :)
Ah, square METER, not square foot. Big difference!
i need better pictures to visualize how big it is
The original article that the other poster linked to correctly described it as 1,100 meters, whereas 3DPrint got it wrong.
Its going to change everything—from how we live to what we wear and eat —even what we will do. Even war will change. It is a revolution as great as the Steam Engine in early 19th Century.
I stand corrected.
Soon building habitats on Mars.
I cannot wait to savor my first 3D printed Porterhouse and baked sweet potato. =) Hey Bartender! Print me up a Jack and Coke please! =)
I wonder how many return trips to harbor freight to finish a house.
Is it supposed to be droopy?
Amazing stuff. I would be afraid to live in a building built by China’s standards, though.
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