“Yasin Torunoglu”
Good to see the Turks have taken Eindhoven.
My cousins who fought in the Bulge will be gratified to hear that’s what they died for.
I can tell you from trying to get plans approved at my local planning office that if it isn’t in the manual already, you won’t get a permit. There have been wonderful building materials and techniques proposed since the 1940’s. I couldn’t use any of them to build with today. They simply aren’t allowed.
These articles rarely make clear what part os 3D and what part isn’t. The French home shown on this site a few days ago clearly had regular wooden joists on top. Electric? Plumbing? Sewer? Fou8ndation? I like the idea of 3D printed homes, but I want more than a fairy tale about a printer spitting out a ready to move in home. The stories read more like press releases.
Trivia: In Operation Market-Garden (”A Bridge Too Far”) the 101st Airborne dropped and fought around Eindoven.
It seems to me that the limiting case of 3-d printing is just robotic brick masons, and robotic carpenters printing in brick, mortar, and lumber.
I noticed the article didn’t bother to print pictures and showcase how beautiful these homes are...
Watch out for those floor-to-ceiling settlement cracks.