The 3D printer that can build a house in 24 hours

Published by Trudi Schifter, CEO at AquaSPE AG in Technology

The 3D printer that can build a house in 24 hours

A revolutionary 3D concrete printer can build a 2,500-square-foot home layer by layer in a single day

A newly built house (© Getty)

Getty


The University of Southern California is testing a giant 3D printer that could be used to build a whole house in under 24 hours.

Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis has designed the giant robot that replaces construction workers with a nozzle on a gantry, this squirts out concrete and can quickly build a home according to a computer pattern. It is “basically scaling up 3D printing to the scale of building,” says Khoshnevis. The technology, known as Contour Crafting, could revolutionise the construction industry.

The affordable home?

Contour Crafting could slash the cost of home-owning, making it possible for millions of displaced people to get on the property ladder. It could even be used in disaster relief areas to build emergency and replacement housing.  For example, after an event such as Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines, which has displaced almost 600,000 people, Contour Crafting could be used to build replacement homes quickly.

It could be used to create high-quality shelter for people currently living in desperate conditions. “At the dawn of the 21st century [slums] are the condition of shelter for nearly one billion people in our world,” says Khoshnevis, “These buildings are breeding grounds for disease a problem of conventional construction which is slow, labour intensive and inefficient.”

As Khoshnevis points out, if you look around you pretty much everything is made automatically these days – “your shoes, your clothes, home appliances, your car. The only thing that is still built by hand are these buildings.”

A 3D printing robot (© Contour Crafting)

Contour Crafting

The robot automates the process of building a house from scratch

How does Contour Crafting work?

The Contour Crafting system is a robot that by automates age-old tools normally used by hand. These are wielded by a robotic gantry that builds a three-dimensional object.

“Ultimately it would work like this,” says Brad Lemley from Discover Magazine. “On a cleared and leveled site, workers would lay down two rails a few feet further apart than the eventual building's width and a computer-controlled contour crafter would take over from there. A gantry-type crane with a hanging nozzle and a components-placing arm would travel along the rails. The nozzle would spit out concrete in layers to create hollow walls, and then fill in the walls with additional concrete… humans would hang doors and insert windows.”

The robot carries a reservoir of ready made concrete (© Contour Crafting)

Contour Crafting

The robot carries a reservoir of ready made concrete

“It’s a CAD/CAM solution,” says Khoshnevis. The buildings are “designed on computer and built by a computer”. Contour Crafting hopes to generate “entire neighbourhoods built at a fraction of the cost, in a fraction of the time, far more safely, and with architectural flexibility that is unprecedented.”

The Contour Crafting solution also produces much stronger structures than traditional building methods. According to Contour Crafting the tested wall is a 10,000PSI (pounds per square inch) strength compared to an average of 3,000PSI for a regular wall.

A test wall built with the robotic arm (© Contour Crafting)

Contour Crafting

A test wall built with the robotic arm

The system could potentially be used to build large office blocks and even tower blocks. “You can have multi-nozzle machines and even have the structure climb the building,” says Khoshnevis. says Khoshnevis. This animationdemonstrates how a home is built using the Contour Crafting technique.

Will all future buildings look the same?

One concern with contour crafted homes is that they’d all look the same. Mind-numbing duplication was a key criticism of the suburban estates from the 1950s, even though they also brought good-quality housing to millions of people. Would robot-made homes have the same problem, spitting out endless duplication of the same basic template?

They would not be as homogenous as the suburbs, says Khoshnevis, because “every [Contour Crafted] building can be different. They do not have to look like track houses because all you have to do is change a computer program” to get a completely different house.

Because the buildings are printed with a nozzle, they can also be far more creative than current constructions. “The walls can be curved” says Khoshnevis and “you can have very exotic architectural features without incurring additional costs.”

A Contour Crafting robotic arm being tested at the research centre (© Colour Crafting)

Colour Crafting

A Contour Crafting robotic arm being tested at the research centre

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Category: Technology

4 Replies

wow that is amazing, you ...

wow that is amazing, you could use that for affordable housing in EM countries to new design possibilities for architects or rather archi-programmers!

Published by Raphael Kappeler, EFG Financial Products - Derivatives Sales

1 Comment

yes, a whole new business. I LOVE it. Let's do a TOY house! How about that for a 2015 project??

Published by Trudi Schifter, CEO at AquaSPE AG

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i like this, lets hope they ...

i like this, lets hope they start soon .

Published by max burger, Golien Ltd - Chairman

soo true! it's definitely a ...

soo true! it's definitely a future trend that will materialise soon enough. although, i do remember a professor telling me that they do not have printers which can "print" a large/diverse range of materials, making it a little difficult to be used for housing. but i am sure they'll get around that. thanks for sharing Trudi!

Published by Devang Bharania

This is unbelievable...what ...

This is unbelievable...what will happen to all the workers around the world, who work on the construction sites..?? I guess they are planning to use these robots on Mars :)

Published by Monique Burger, Burger Collection www.burgercollection.org - Owner

1 Comment

VERY cool heh? This is the most widespread commercial use other than medical reconstruction that I have seen so far. And for building outposts in space Monique...cool idea.

Published by Trudi Schifter, CEO at AquaSPE AG

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