"We’re essentially giving designers a toolkit." Researchers make breakthrough in 3D printing: 'Building the next generation' first appeared on The Cool Down.
House Zero in Austin, Texas, is a 2,000-square-foot home that was built with 3D-printed concrete. Lake Flato Architects In architecture, new materials rarely emerge. For centuries, wood, masonry and ...
Europe’s largest 3D-printed building is scheduled for completion in July in Heidelberg, Germany. Spearheaded by Kraus Group, a local real estate developer, investor, and manager, this 6,600-sf project ...
The building and construction sector is the largest emitter of greenhouse gases. The sawmills of Maine generate a lot of wood waste each year: 1 million tons to be exact. For years, it was just ...
3D printed concrete may lead to a shift in architecture and construction. Because it can be used to produce new shapes and forms that current technologies struggle with, it may change the ...
Is 3D printing the future of housebuilding? It certainly will be if new startup Mighty Buildings, which launched from stealth mode this week, has its way. The company builds houses rapidly using a ...
Marines with the 9th Engineer Support Battalion at Camp Hansen, Okinawa, are applying advances in 3D concrete printing to a ...
3D-printed construction continues to grow in popularity worldwide, and the latest example is an ambitious new low-rise apartment building in Germany. The project will incorporate cutting-edge 3D ...
When building a PC, messy cables not only look bad but can also interfere with airflow. Cable combs are simple 3D-printed clips that keep individual wires in neat parallel lines, making the inside of ...
Students sitting in the CLIFF may have noticed several Connect Four games at the tables. What they may not know is that those ...
Developers in Southern California are building what they say will be the first 3D-printed zero net energy neighborhood in the United States. Palari Group said it plans to build 15 eco-friendly ...
(THE CONVERSATION) – In architecture, new materials rarely emerge. For centuries, wood, masonry and concrete formed the basis for most structures on Earth. In the 1880s, the adoption of the steel ...