Two-Story Model Home In Belgium Was Produced In One Piece With Europe's Biggest 3D Printer

By - 507 words

Language

Reading Level

Listen to Article

A two-story model home is Belgium is the world's first 3D structure printed in one piece (Credit: Jasmien Smets/ Kamp C)

Experts have long predicted that 3D printing will revolutionize the construction industry by making home builds cheaper, faster, and more environmentally-friendly. However, the uptake has been slower than anticipated because 3D technology to create fully-functional homes has been considered lacking. That perception may change soon with the recent unveiling of the world's first two-story home printed in a single piece in Antwerp, Belgium.

"What makes this house so unique is that we printed it with a fixed 3D concrete printer," said Emiel Ascione, project manager at Kamp C construction company, which spearheaded the undertaking. "Other houses that were printed around the world only have one floor. In many cases, the components were printed in a factory and were assembled on-site. We, however, printed the entire building envelope in one piece on-site."

The 3D printed structure was 60 percent cheaper and three times stronger than a conventional home (Credit: Jasmien Smets/ Kamp C)

The construction process began in November 2019 with the delivery of a massive 32-foot x 32-foot cement 3D printer, known as BOD2. While it needed some human help to set up, once in operation, BOD2 was fully autonomous, requiring just one person to supervise the build from a nearby computer. Though the actual printing process took a mere three weeks, the house was constructed over a few months to fit in with the school schedules of the students working on the project. Kamp C believes technological advances will make it possible to build similar homes in about two days in the future.

The two-story, 986-square-foot, home, which was unveiled in July 2020, has a small kitchen, two living rooms, a foyer, and a bathroom, as well as numerous human-installed eco-friendly features, such as underfloor heating and solar panels. Open to the public until the end of September, it is part of the European C3PO project to showcase emerging 3D printing technologies and to encourage the continent's construction industry to adopt them in its construction techniques.

The two-story home took just three weeks to build (Credit: Jasmien Smets/ Kamp C)

"Printing this building is mainly a statement," Ascione told Digital Trends. "It shows the construction industry the accessibility and potential of this technique. The benefits of additive manufacturing are already paying off in a wide range of other industries. It's about time that housing caught up with them."

Kamp C says the 3D printed structure cost about 60 percent less than a typical brick home and was also much sturdier. "The compressive strength of the material is three times higher than the classic rapid building block," Kamp C's Marijke Aerts told Design Boom.

This is not the only exciting 3D printed housing project in the works. In Tabasco, Mexico, US-based nonprofit New Story has teamed up with tech company ICON to build the world's first 3D printed neighborhood. The two-bedroom homes, designed to combat homelessness, are strong enough to withstand natural disasters like hurricanes and earthquakes. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has also joined the 3D printing movement with the recent completion of a 6,900-square-foot house in Dubai using local materials. At this rate, 3D printers may soon become a fixture at construction sites worldwide.

Resources: ec.europa.eu, newatlas.com, www.kampc.be

Workbook

Get the Workbook for this article!

Workbook contains: Article, Reading Comprehension, Critical Thinking Questions, Vocabulary in Context (+ answers), Multiple Choice Quiz (+ answers), Parts of Speech Quiz (+ answers), Vocabulary Game (+ answers)
Cite Article
Learn Keywords in this Article
187 Comments
  • leeingest
    leeingestabout 4 years
    so cool
    • delirium_skiing
      delirium_skiingabout 4 years
      So cool
      • grinch2010
        grinch2010about 4 years
        this house is so cool and realy nice
        • saints62509
          saints62509about 4 years
          i like the idea of a 3d house and cool designs i really wish i had the money to buy that house and live in it. i never seen a house this good i bet it took a lot of work.
          • xxdragonx
            xxdragonxabout 4 years
            The house would not take a lot of work because, the house it not being built by actual people.
          • xxdragonx
            xxdragonxabout 4 years
            Wow thatis very cool I wish I could see it built in real life duing the first house being built by it.
            • brooklynj
              brooklynjabout 4 years
              Wow this is a nice house! I love decerating its amazing and fun and this is a great house I will live in it! Im love decerating so much I have my room its undre the sink but its nice I bought lights grabed my stuff and decerated it! This is very smart and fast these people deserve a cookie and a star!
              • ratsunited
                ratsunitedabout 4 years
                How is this even possible?! This could've taken a year to print out! But only 2 weeks? WOW
                • joy9291
                  joy9291about 4 years
                  its soo delicate that it looks like it took years and years just to build a house! I was amazed when it said it only took two weeks to build them
                  • sparf08
                    sparf08about 4 years
                    The fact that this only took two weeks Blows my mind.
                    • seajay
                      seajayabout 4 years
                      !!COOL!!