11 Lies of the 3D Printed House | EXPOSING THE TRUTH of Printed Construction

Ғылым және технология

Stephan Mansour is writing the ISO/ASTM code for 3D printed houses so I had him on to separate truth from fiction. Keep in mind some of these myths may come true in the future, we just haven't seen evidence of them yet.
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0:00 Intro
1:12 Myth 1) Price
2:37 Myth 2) Time
4:07 Myth 3) Hard to Understand
5:09 Myth 4) Just Add Water
6:26 Myth 5) Stealing Jobs
8:14 Myth 7) Zero Waste
10:02 Myth 8) Only Concrete, Only Houses
10:24 Myth 9) 3DCP is Useless
11:31 Myth10) 3DCP is Easy
12:31 Myth11) ISO/ASTM Standards are Required by Law

Пікірлер: 483

  • @kurtlangberg5886
    @kurtlangberg5886 Жыл бұрын

    As with all technologies, healthy skepticism is needed.

  • @cptcosmo
    @cptcosmo Жыл бұрын

    Has anyone built one of these 3D printed houses on a hydraulic shake table? This Architect would like to know...

  • @phil562
    @phil5629 ай бұрын

    It blows my mind reading these comments. It's as if nobody talking has seen industries emerge, innovate, stabilize, and then commercialize in their lifetimes. Ever heard of "manufactured houses"? People were afraid of those too. The future will be made with stick built homes, monolithic concrete domes, printed houses, factory built houses, kit houses, and probably stuff we haven't even seen yet. Where stick built makes sense, there will be profit and customers. Where there are tornados, hurricanes and fires, there will be a market for concrete. Where there is need for speed, and cost savings, there will be factory houses. Have no fear, you can chose your own adventure.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah so true well said

  • @bobdinitto
    @bobdinitto Жыл бұрын

    All high technology projects involve tradeoffs. 3D printed construction technology is still in its infancy so I readily expect improvements in techniques and processes, standardization, and cost reduction in the years ahead. I'd be interested to compare the carbon footprints of a 3D printed concrete house to comparable sized wood-frame and cinder block homes to see which is greener.

  • @nobreighner
    @nobreighner Жыл бұрын

    Got Real!! 12. Thermal Bridging. 13. Moisture Control It can all get better by designing machines to make exactly what wall/building assemblies should be, rather than tweaking wall/building design to match what existing 3D printers already do. Imagination required!

  • @316lvmnoneofyourbusiness7
    @316lvmnoneofyourbusiness76 ай бұрын

    I know this is in it's infancy stage and later on issues can be addressed. That said, you'd have to take into account the environment, climate, weather, fault zones, flooding zones and so on. So, building these homes in tornado alley would have to be different from one built in an environment of heavy snowfall. It will be interesting to see how this progresses.

  • @ivelcolaco3090
    @ivelcolaco3090 Жыл бұрын

    Hello Jarett! It's nice and resourceful that you have covered the industry of 3d printed structures on various parameters. I suggest you and officials from Cobod along with Mensa-Korte have a detailed video on the insurance, valuation and claims settlement of damages aspect of 3d structures.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Those are tough topics! I recently had a guest on from a printing company in Germany and we talked about how experimental construction in Germany isn't eligible for regular insurance! That episode will air on the podcast channel next week.

  • @elizabethbennet4791

    @elizabethbennet4791

    Жыл бұрын

    @@automateconstruction wow amazing!!! Youre so great Jarett, been following you for a couple years at least now and you are THE guy! My boyfriend has done a lot of commercial art and tech classes and has done 3d printing but not for houses; he turned me onto the 3d printing of houses. we have a plan to build in florida 3D as much as we can for a spanish mission style house with an enclosed courtyard!!!! Crazy huh???! oh we have a dream!!!

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    @@elizabethbennet4791 That's awesome thank you so much for you kind words can't wait for an update on your project in the future!

  • @nobreighner

    @nobreighner

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw one news report that the buyer of two of the four Icon homes in Austin could not get homeowner's insurance - in order to get a mortgage (obviously she paid cash). Never heard how it resolved, and have not since found that report.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nobreighner I met her when I stayed there, she joined Belinda Carr and I for a slice of pizza. Good people! I hope they got their insurance sorted.

  • @jamestaylor3805
    @jamestaylor3805 Жыл бұрын

    Repairability. In a metal framed structure or wood framed home any damaged components can be repaired or replaced fairly easily without lasting damage, but every cut into concrete permanently reduces it's strength. Locality, you touched on the "just add water" bit, but it goes even beyond that. The availability of cement ready aggregates are not universal... the potential cost of transporting tons of minerals will add up very quickly. Also, cement walls may be great for a temperate and dry location, but places which are extra cold or wet.... not so much.

  • @raymondpeters9186
    @raymondpeters9186 Жыл бұрын

    Pumicecrete is by far the best building material on the planet Pumicecrete is a mixture of pumice cement and water mixed and poured into a set of reusable forms walls are poured from 12"to 24" thick pumicecrete is fireproof termite proof rust rot and mold proof and has a high R value and good sound attenuation solid poured walls means no critters can live in your walls Pumicecrete can be built for a fraction of the cost and time and is perfect for automation

  • @jonathanbell8887

    @jonathanbell8887

    10 ай бұрын

    Pumpicecrete and pumicecrete accessories.

  • @juliomanzano279

    @juliomanzano279

    8 ай бұрын

    V be a da

  • @kevyjo

    @kevyjo

    8 ай бұрын

    Pumice mordar is used in hia Sofia which has survived 1500 years and terrible earthquakes

  • @jasonjaeger4042

    @jasonjaeger4042

    8 ай бұрын

    Liquid nails is better, every job I install floors on the contractor has it holding most of the building together and filling all the gaps so obviously it's the best material. Or....maybe the company I subcontract through sucks?🤔

  • @raymondpeters9186

    @raymondpeters9186

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Limbodaramus the main place pumicecrete is done is in New Mexico Pumicecrete works in all climates

  • @slartibartfast7921
    @slartibartfast7921 Жыл бұрын

    Truly respect your willingness to highlight these man. You are only strengthening the space by doing so. Well done 👊🏻

  • @MrArtist7777
    @MrArtist77777 ай бұрын

    Appreciate dispelling the myths here, especially costs. I’ve watched debunking shipping container homes as they’re pretty much a scam. 3D printing looks legit, just not cheaper, faster or better than stick built, other than having better R-value walls and walls being fire resistant.

  • @robertwagner8596

    @robertwagner8596

    5 ай бұрын

    i live in a container house....when i go on vacation i just put it on a container ship,i been to 198 countries so far!

  • @JerseyLynne
    @JerseyLynne Жыл бұрын

    I was really wondering about this! Thanks for the program, thanks for the work.

  • @eleanastclare
    @eleanastclare Жыл бұрын

    Really appreciate the information provided! Wish the media could approach as you do! Thank you!

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    "The media" have their own problems and their own agendas. They want an interesting story to get readers. That story could range from "3-D printed houses are amazingly cheap/fast" to "3-D printed houses are a lie". The reporters are not likely to have easy answers and, as the guy in the podcasts says, they are still working out the details and trying different things, plus the companies who make the houses want it to look promising for buyers, and the reporters are less likely to know the difference between exaggeration and the truth, and it takes time and money to do real research, where often the reporters need to write a story for very little pay. There are a lot of reasons why it is hard to write objective and accurate stories about 3-D houses, and to make them interesting as well.

  • @joemartino6976
    @joemartino69764 ай бұрын

    I actually stayed in the 3D printed home at the very beginning of your video, currently being used as an AirBnb in Austin. I also visited the Icon home development in nearby Georgetown. Interesting stuff. I'm not sure what the compelling selling point is beyond the novelty of it. The homes in Georgetown were priced around $500K so there was no advantage versus stick building. I think it needs some sort of clear and universal advantage to make any significant inroads in home construction. I also assume that 3D printing does not lend itself to one-off construction (except for luxury homes) given the set-up overhead of the equipment.

  • @dobertjowneyrunior3023

    @dobertjowneyrunior3023

    3 ай бұрын

    in places like Florida where I'm from, insurance companies will no longer be writing policies for homes w mortages due to paying out every year for hurricanes. I can see the benefit of them if insurance companies will write policies for concrete homes. Same for homes in tornado alley etc. Everyone in florida thats a homeowner in 30 years will be either rich people or uninsured which sounds like a nightmare. Not to mention stickframe newbuild in a moisture rich, termite rich state, sucks ass and they dont last longer than the life of the mortgage in the first place due to getting rained on all the fuckin time during construction. A whole subdivision was built behind my parents 15-20 years ago and pretty much every home has had major work done on them due to rot.

  • @egcruzer
    @egcruzer Жыл бұрын

    I’m for advancing the development of 3D printed homes but at the same time I never understood why they don’t use CMU block to build homes. Not only is it a very well understood construction method but the blocks are made in a controlled environment ensuring quality control of not only the mix but also consistent density of the finished product. CMU also has a consistent flat surface allowing other materials like insulation board, hardy board or other finishes can more easily be applied. As someone with a FDM printer at home I’d be worried about layer adhesion, consistent density and repair methods of poor quality sections.

  • @rogermccaslin5963

    @rogermccaslin5963

    Жыл бұрын

    Unless you are talking about something different, here in South Florida, most homes appear to be built of concrete block. My house, built in 1959, is concrete block so it's been around for a long time. There are a lot of commercial projects going on that use tilt wall construction. To me, that makes more sense than printing.

  • @beegee22

    @beegee22

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rogermccaslin5963 Older South Florida building codes required that exterior walls be made of 8 inch CMU's for hurricane tolerance. They also required tie straps at all roof truss/rafter joints at the upper sill plate for the same reason, and roof cover had to be hard tiles, often flat - tiles were also tied with wires to the sub-roof panels to prevent them from becoming projectiles. South Florida paid dearly for relaxing its construction codes, especially in the aftermath of Hurricane Andrew.

  • @zantezaint2348

    @zantezaint2348

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah cmu would work on earth, but to get it to the moon, it would cost a million dollars to bring 1 cmu block over there. A 3d printer that uses the moon’s material is the key to our survival

  • @JDHood
    @JDHood7 ай бұрын

    I'm not clear on the advantage of modern 3DCP -- vs -- modern cinder-block construction for a typical 3br/2ba home. What makes it compellingly preferable?

  • @ZappyOh

    @ZappyOh

    4 ай бұрын

    I would say the main advantages are freedom of design, cheap and accurate physical models, plus somewhat reduced physical labor on site.

  • @florforever1
    @florforever1 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your valuable information. I truly appreciate it because it seems too good to be true and I tell you where I live that equipment couldn't even fit up here unless you brought. It piece by piece an et cetera

  • @menons4republic476
    @menons4republic476 Жыл бұрын

    Jarret Thank you. You just answered all . What about other materials than concrete, like the mighty buildings have

  • @netwt449
    @netwt44911 ай бұрын

    These homes will be most valuable as “ neighborhood “ projects as opposed to single home construction. Hopefully the larger scale of neighborhood/ subdivision projects can eventually underwrite transportation costs for single or smaller projects.

  • @dayzplayer8539

    @dayzplayer8539

    6 ай бұрын

    Maybe even low income housing?

  • @justthink5854

    @justthink5854

    5 ай бұрын

    @@dayzplayer8539 bs. you can say that about any housing

  • @liammapps123
    @liammapps123 Жыл бұрын

    I imagine a decentralized approach utilizing a team of bots. One or two programmable types, articulators and haulers coordinated and redundant. A team of 10 or 20 would do almost all tasks: mixing, hauling, scaffold build and tear down, extruding, reinforcement positioning, error and quality control management, washing and cleanup, multiple extruders would allow for better intricacy without slowing things down. About the size of the Silent Running bots. .... and another thought, maybe there is a way to use recycled plastics in fiber form to strengthen the extrusion. ... Great work! btw.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Love it! Thanks!

  • @Sam-fp8zm
    @Sam-fp8zm Жыл бұрын

    Please state specific dollar numbers of 3d printed houses compared to traditional timber frames houses of the same square foot / metre. Also does there need to be flat land all around for the printer to be set up on? What if the land is not flat and clear etc?

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Construction isn’t commoditized like that, costs in one region could be double another

  • @Ladymeg
    @Ladymeg9 ай бұрын

    Hello there, please do you have any idea how one can buy the 3D printer machine?

  • @leestrz4153
    @leestrz41535 ай бұрын

    Too many of these are just common sense understanding of the basics behind either construction or 3d printing in general. There were a few very good ones too which require some experience to understand. Im doing a desp dive on this topic and I'm glad to have found your channel. Keep it up.

  • @axelpalfy7597
    @axelpalfy7597 Жыл бұрын

    building walls is about -10 percent of the time when building a house, it is the cheapest thing, so about the uselessness of this technology,and not to mention that you won't replace people with that machine, it still requires an operator plus a qualified programmer technician and transport, and setting up and removing the machineso it turns out to be much more expensive

  • @squashduos1258
    @squashduos1258 Жыл бұрын

    Are there any radon concerns with concrete walls all over. Typically it’s only for the foundation and potentially a basement where people don’t spend a lot of time in.

  • @natchap23
    @natchap2311 ай бұрын

    Could the addition of crushed or shredded PET / single use plastics into the concrete help with durability? I live in tornado alley and look at these home types as possibly safer than the paper houses they slap together quickly. Impressive subject, and thank you for doing the work to bring this list together.

  • @thirstypilgrim97

    @thirstypilgrim97

    9 ай бұрын

    Have you considered Perfect Block Composite ICCF? It's rated for 250mph winds.

  • @james.telfer

    @james.telfer

    8 ай бұрын

    @@thirstypilgrim97 +1 for that suggestion - plus consider circular or dome shapes and naturally less susceptible to wind. Solid roof, not a wooden one and you should be pretty bomb proof. And heavy metal window shutters. You could even build earth banks to minimise the above ground profile - Hobbit home style. Always seems insane people just accept their house will be demolished in a tornado - just BUILD them tornado proof! 🤷‍♀

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    it is usually about the money and fashion. some people would not even like someone to paint their house purple, let alone make it round or other shapes, so fashion dictates they should look like other houses around them. then there is the money problem. houses are expensive, and contractors already know how to make a square home. even putting in a few nicer features can make the price too high and totally learning new construction techniques would make the price go through the roof, pun intended. many contractors will not even do solar panels. There are also space efficiency issues. the land is very expensive, and is generally also squarish, leading people to want squarish homes. for instance, think of all the floor space you lose if you cut off the corners of your house. overall, it is a lot easier to just agree to have a squarish house and hope you are not hit by a tornado. that being said, a squarish house made of concrete would be fine in a tornado, but then we are back to the expense problems. @@james.telfer

  • @wilurbean

    @wilurbean

    7 ай бұрын

    It's possible in the desktop ish sized printers. MatterHackers or one of the pro brands has a carbon fiber injection process. It puts a continuous stand into 3d printed tools

  • @dplj4428

    @dplj4428

    7 ай бұрын

    Guam, not 3D back when, but concrete withstands better in storms.

  • @carlcampbell6827
    @carlcampbell68278 ай бұрын

    Hello Jarrett. You give courses; are you and architect? Who is the expert you are talking to here? What happens when and opening, is wrong size or in wrong place? How about walls that need to be relocated?

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    8 ай бұрын

    Hello Carrl. After many comments asking for one I made a course on how to 3d print a house. No I’m not an architect, the course does not give you the tools to be an architect. It only showcases the commonalities and diffidences between the many projects I’ve witnessed from the ground up. I’m talking to a leader of the ASTM committee on 3D printed construction. If an opening is too big they can cut it wet or dry. Mistakes happen in all kinds of construction and they compensate for it. If it’s too far off for spec it must be redone but that’s uncommon. Phew that was a lot of questions.

  • @Living_EDventures
    @Living_EDventures Жыл бұрын

    Seems like they would be a nightmare to clean all the interior walls.

  • @MichaelWittner

    @MichaelWittner

    Жыл бұрын

    Not at all. We got pressure. Washers lol😅

  • @Living_EDventures

    @Living_EDventures

    Жыл бұрын

    @MichaelWittner oh so gut everything out of your house to pressure wash the interior walls? Or power wash your bed, dressers, clothes and anything else you don't want wet everytime you need to clean your walls lol

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    same. even with a vacuum with a hose and brush, that would take hours to clean. that being said, the solidity of the structure should allow you to keep most dust out if you really want to. porches could be used as airlocks to help prevent dust getting in. a nice filtration system can keep the air clean. the look is nice. you could easily fill it in though, with mud of some kind, or put board over it.

  • @kcgunesq

    @kcgunesq

    6 ай бұрын

    Some people are going to want to show off the fact that the home is "3D" and what you have raised is an issue. However, the walls don't have to be left that way. First, they can be smoothed during construction on on one or both sides so that they will be a normal, flat and smooth wall. Second, you can still hang drywall or paneling if desired.

  • @kellyplandel3253

    @kellyplandel3253

    27 күн бұрын

    You could plaster the walls fairly easily and make a smooth finish which would make sense to prevent dust and germ buildup.

  • @rightright6582
    @rightright6582 Жыл бұрын

    I saw thw Lennar cummunities of 100 houses, priced at around 500k , so "the biggest lie: 3d house printing does not resolve the housing crisis,

  • @TheRealStructurer
    @TheRealStructurer6 ай бұрын

    Like most new technologies there are some teething issues and thanks for sharing them 👍🏻 Guess they will be sorted out over time or it will not make it

  • @bioglassmusic
    @bioglassmusic Жыл бұрын

    maybe do a video on the different kinds of concrete building construction (if you haven't already). 3D printing vs monolithic domes vs preformed slabs etc and which would be the most beneficial in which climate environments.

  • @rawhidehat
    @rawhidehat Жыл бұрын

    What about the challenge of installing electrical/plumbing systems? And I'd hate to have to renovate one of these someday.

  • @phil562

    @phil562

    9 ай бұрын

    It's simple to leave conduits and e-boxes. Not challenge at all.

  • @gus2603

    @gus2603

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@phil562you have no experience in renovation if you think that.

  • @zeyadzeinn
    @zeyadzeinn Жыл бұрын

    Wow! Jarett this very insightful for anyone without experience. It took me 2 years to understand those Myths. Stephan Mansour is the most helpful and realistic guy in the 3D concrete community. Stay great as you are Jarett. In fact, your videos helped me a lot!

  • @markcollins457
    @markcollins457 Жыл бұрын

    Being from the northeast the cold windy weather makes me look at the key points like thermal break, I don't see a thermal brake at the window and door openings?

  • @PR4Neshia
    @PR4Neshia Жыл бұрын

    In the Los Angeles area of California, who (company or group) would you recommend hiring to print a house?

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    It depends what you mean by print the house if you want to print it on site in concrete, Emergent is the only girl by November in California doing that with houses right now. They have some projects in northern California. I also know of a couple groups in LA that have concrete printers, RIC may be starting building projects soon and rumor has it Winsun will be starting construction projects in LA as well.

  • @alexhammack5349
    @alexhammack53497 ай бұрын

    How would they run wiring ducting and plumbing through walls in this?

  • @joeschlotthauer840
    @joeschlotthauer840 Жыл бұрын

    I don't see a thermal break.

  • @iac4357
    @iac4357 Жыл бұрын

    Seems to me that 3D Concrete home printing, is something that might be better done making Prefab Panels, with Insulation etc already applied, inside a Shop; rather than printed Onsite. While one large Cement Mixer can be used for several Cinder Block Home constructions, with 3D Printing; several homes being put up simutaneously, would require several Printers printing simultaneously !

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    i think the opposite. the strong suit of this construction is that you can make all of the walls a singular unit. it should be very strong. having more printers would not be a huge issue, if the construction were common. most small companies could just rent them.

  • @josephfra2456
    @josephfra2456 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, thanks for the information. Would it be much of a savings if just the outer shell was printed and the interior was stick built, making it easier for the trades?

  • @berryreading4809

    @berryreading4809

    Жыл бұрын

    That's actually supposed to be one of the largest labor/other material costs of this whole concept... hollow interior walls for running emt/low voltage/pex (bath/kitchen areas on exterior walls have even more specifics), PT framing is installed in door/window openings for mostly conventional installation, slab to top plate rod tied owns to cnc cut top plates for wood trusses, basically only the ceiling, areas above doors, and other random areas require drywall hanging/finishing... If designed right they in theory are easy to modify or remodel in the future.... Although I definitely see a future where everyone wants their soft serve walls stripped and covered with deywall/shiplap/t&g/etc 🤣 adding lots of labor and material costs while backtracking on many of the current "selling points"... I guess time will tell 🤨😉👍

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    definitely will see people filling in the gaps with filler to make the walls smooth. ngl, i like the look of this concrete but it also looks like a dusting and cleaning nightmare. @@berryreading4809

  • @VETERANSHERMANANDMAXINHAWAII
    @VETERANSHERMANANDMAXINHAWAII8 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU GUYS FOR THIS VIDEO.

  • @user-rt1wj1zv5j
    @user-rt1wj1zv5j5 ай бұрын

    nice post, i as well believe that if the printers can be configured to sooth different locations at different conditions then progress can be made

  • @chazw3x
    @chazw3x7 ай бұрын

    What is the actual print material? Is it actually concrete or something else?

  • @nerdCopter
    @nerdCopter Жыл бұрын

    +1👍thanks for your continued efforts in bringing the info 💪 interested in this subject as a client/homeowner

  • @pfschuyler
    @pfschuyler Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video, but how about the Elephant in the building? Acoustics, acoustics, acoustics. :-)

  • @liammapps123

    @liammapps123

    Жыл бұрын

    surface geometry

  • @Z-add
    @Z-add7 ай бұрын

    In the videos I'm only seeing ground floor 3dprinted but not the first floor. Please explain.

  • @syedmujtaba534
    @syedmujtaba5347 ай бұрын

    Marvelous design!

  • @604cpr
    @604cpr Жыл бұрын

    I think once a standard is developed it’ll become more viable. For now I think where the technology shines is quickly building template houses in subdivisions to minimize travel and setup costs.

  • @jiti5034

    @jiti5034

    Жыл бұрын

    As a temples I guess yes .. but then again if a company is going to use it as a selling point then they will' have to use it through the projects

  • @dannybuttimer9383
    @dannybuttimer9383 Жыл бұрын

    Container and 3D Printed is a good combination... Really cool

  • @joevarga5982

    @joevarga5982

    Жыл бұрын

    Huh? Container construction is lame as hell.

  • @liammapps123

    @liammapps123

    Жыл бұрын

    Print the container.

  • @Cnupoc
    @Cnupoc7 ай бұрын

    apart from all the other issues with the technology I definitely don't like the part where they sell their own cartridges with special material and their machines work only with THEIR cartridges... if anyone remembers the whole ink printer cartridges controversy around HP then you know what I mean by that.

  • @VerifyTheTruth
    @VerifyTheTruth Жыл бұрын

    Has Someone Designed An Optimizations Software To Help Calculate And/Or Automate The Best Mixture And Consistency Of The Materials In Real Time?

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    They’re just recently getting around to having the right sensors to do that

  • @osamaobama6257

    @osamaobama6257

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah there has to be some sort of algorithm the machine can take into account to modify the mix

  • @ghkfan
    @ghkfan Жыл бұрын

    I love your balanced approach to this interesting topic.

  • @ireneswackyjournals8810
    @ireneswackyjournals88108 ай бұрын

    Maybe this is the type Of construction needed for areas such as Florida. We do construct using concrete post Andrew and it’s been what let’s us withstand Categories higher than 2. The question is how the windows, and ceiling are constructed as well and tied to the structure.

  • @rockfishmiller
    @rockfishmiller10 ай бұрын

    How do they hold up in an earthquake? Varying magnitudes, durations, of course.

  • @ladylight007
    @ladylight007 Жыл бұрын

    So can this be renting out in any state?

  • @brandonadams6743
    @brandonadams67439 ай бұрын

    I want to know the destructive testing done for structural integrity

  • @zweiwing4435
    @zweiwing4435 Жыл бұрын

    In what location is have those house design?

  • @selwynmouton9442
    @selwynmouton9442 Жыл бұрын

    Where can this 3D printer be bought, and do they give you a course to operate the machine?

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Check out all my other videos they highlight the awesome companies selling printers!

  • @cchavezjr7
    @cchavezjr7 Жыл бұрын

    One thing that never really gets asked or answer is, "What is the point". Is it to be better than stick built? Cheaper, more durable, more stable? Even if it's not cheaper now, maybe it will be less expensive down the road but is there a true reason to do this versus what we have been doing other than it CAN be done?

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    to me, it is the strength of a solid build unit, and all of the amazing shapes you could make, including building structures inside of the walls. i think 3D printed buildings are the future. even the way some buildings are cast of concrete now is very similar, and i have seen builds where they raise the building area up with the building. build a floor, raise the equipment up, build another floor, etc.

  • @ronblack7870
    @ronblack78708 ай бұрын

    they need to adapt a smoothing tool to the printer to get rid of the layered look. how do you clean walls like that ? say in a washroom? the only way to paint it is with sprayand that will take a lot of paint to get into all the grooves.

  • @eattherich9215

    @eattherich9215

    7 ай бұрын

    You can apply a smooth render.

  • @carlcampbell6827
    @carlcampbell68278 ай бұрын

    How strong is a thin multi-layer unreinforced concrete wall?

  • @kyles4744

    @kyles4744

    2 ай бұрын

    I would assume not to strong at all

  • @trashman1358
    @trashman1358 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video buddy and gl with the channel. I do feel that business does - after too long if you ask me - notice bottlenecks and looks to 'iron' them out. I'd like to ask the question, of the difficulties you see in 3d printing, which problems do you believe cannot be automated? For instance, the mixing, waste and delivery of the concrete. Agreed, it will take time, but I cannot help but believe all of these processes (based on sensors checking the site's weather, temperature, humidity, sun intensity, etc) can be automated and make the mixture to suit. 2. Observation. CCTV cameras can do facial recognition, read number plates... Knowing we already have the architectural drawings (maybe designed by AI?) I don't think it's that big a stretch to set up 4 cctv cameras to watch the print to ensure a successful build. I think it's strange that we've come up with AI, 3d printing, self driving cars, etc and everyone is critiquing them as if: This is the end product. Chatgpt is still in open beta. Things take time. But cast your mind 20, 50 years into the future. What do you think a 3d house printing site will look like then? I mean, I don't even think the lorry making deliveries will have a person involved at any stage: AI will scan all manufacturers to buy proven products at the lowest price based on time scales required, these products will be loaded onto the lorry by automated fork lift trucks (or a futuristic variant based on AI efficiency design), the lorry will automatically drive to the site and make the delivery, returning to it's home depot once done. I do like your title - you've got to get those views in, including mine - but I think the actual title of this piece is: "3D printing. Where we are now." But nice one Jarett and all the very best for the future.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! To try and answer your question, I have to preface by saying I don’t have the best grasp on which tasks can, and can’t be easily automated. Apparently things like manipulating fine wires into particular places is challenging due to the way they tend to fall or tangle randomly. I have no intuition for which tasks are easier or more difficult for a robot to do on site, there is just so much left to automate. I know that’s not much of an answer so I’ll give you a crapshoot anyway, just a guess. I think that details are going to become cheap to implement however, plumbing and electrical is likely to take longer to automate. Spray foam insulation also requires a fine touch along with other types of Louisville commonly used with 3d Printing concrete. Beyond that there’s a whole host of tasks that are just easier for a person to do their machine at this stage. If you look at the number of robots on the manufacturing floor of Teslas, Fremont facility, it initially ballooned, and then was drastically reduced when they realize they tried to overhaul the meat. They got rid of a ton of bots, then started replacing them slowly, but there is a such thing as over automation, or at least automating to quickly. I hope that approaches in answer to your question.

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    all a matter of how badly they want it. often it comes down to money. could we build a bot that lays in pipes and wiring, yes. would it be expensive to design? yes. would local codes even allow it? questionable. you also need people who are creative. i saw a bot being used for making parts and it was not being used to its full capabilities because the people at the plant were still living in the 20th century, mentally.@@automateconstruction

  • @jiti5034
    @jiti5034 Жыл бұрын

    Like any other technology there is lot of "marketing fluff" about 3DP in all aspects of production.. for mass production or construction industry it will be lot of commercial/ legal issues, + purely niche usage .. lets hope lot of these companies don;t do the "Fake it until make it" mantra! like that Teranos by the way 3DP is great technology and it has been around fora while nothing new really once it come out of patent protection it become widely known

  • @johnnyrocko7105
    @johnnyrocko71059 ай бұрын

    Nothing is faster than a tilt up building The drawback is steel beams are needed That being said, perhaps 3d printed homes and the tilt up design can be combined The base structure being tilt up with 3d printed sections that have certain angles or overhangs that can't be poured on the ground Honestly, I'm not a fan of the layer lines on a 3d printed house either Leaving the layers exposed just looks unfinished to me and is basically just bragging about the fact it's not traditionally built It would be more impressive if you couldn't tell so much that a house was built via traditional carpentry methods/ pre fab, or if the home was built in an untraditional manner using renewable/recycled resources I doubt we'll be 3d printing old rubber tires into houses anytime soon but we can 3d print polymers with wood fibers 🤔 We are just scratching the surface on 3d printed houses, I don't think a proprietary mix of material (basically concrete) is the way to go I fix commercial reefers in concrete yards because throwing ice in the mix makes it set quicker and more densely, now they are using liquid nitrogen Polymers infused with concrete might be an interesting way to go, that would be one heck of an extruder and hot end though lol Pumping out layers of concrete is the beginning, printing infused polymers on an industrial scale using recycled ♻️ plastics might be the next step The bottom is the ground floor which is Y The Y axis stays stationary and the X,Y,Z axis movements are all done via a 3 point frame that moves X Y while the Z is just the hight moving up A giant portable, modular, bed slinger where the bed doesn't move Set up the equipment using crane trucks, print the home, disassemble the gantry system, set it up where the next house goes and print away The biggest drawback is being carpenters and framers working as a team are incredibly fast and efficient There's needs to be a niche that goes beyond just the 3d printed part

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    9 ай бұрын

    Automation is just getting started! I think you are at on the right track but I do think automation will be the best solution in the long term. The only big question is when it gets there.

  • @artistjoh
    @artistjoh6 ай бұрын

    How does 3D printing deal with steel reinforcing? In my country in cyclone/hurricane areas, buildings are required to have steel rods tying the roofing structure to the foundations, so steel reinforcing cannot be avoided.. These clips of 3D printing don't seem to show steel reinforcing, and it seems to me that steel would make it difficult for the 3D printer to work around.

  • @willyng911
    @willyng911 Жыл бұрын

    All 11 points agreed! The frustration I have is always the misunderstanding that 3DCP is easy!

  • @wilurbean
    @wilurbean7 ай бұрын

    They should print and fill the forms with traditional cement, then break them off at the end

  • @darktrojan00
    @darktrojan0022 күн бұрын

    whats the cheapest house 3d printer in the market, does anyone know?

  • @christopherross8358
    @christopherross83585 ай бұрын

    5:10 Need to build an extruder head that has heating elements. This will make the materials tempurature more consistant and help activate curing.

  • @e.akhmet
    @e.akhmet Жыл бұрын

    Most of the shortcomings listed in the video are due to the fact that the market for such construction is still in process. It is foolish to expect from a new product that all supplies, supply chains, and contractors will be at the same level as in the established monopoly market. 3D Homes is an innovative product and is marketed accordingly. Other things being equal, this is indeed a much more convenient, high-quality, and efficient type of construction than traditional frame houses (in the USA).

  • @sn3495

    @sn3495

    Жыл бұрын

    👉💯👈👏

  • @eldnah2
    @eldnah2 Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like the industry has some growing to do and then will hopefully sort itself out.

  • @BracaPhoto
    @BracaPhoto7 ай бұрын

    How is it cheaper than regular CMU blocks ?? Just the labor costs?? Surely it's using more grout/concrete than the standard wall thickness of CMUs --- Its like NFTs - i just don't understand where the "savings" comes in - the block "masons" are just a small fraction of the price of the home

  • @cumburxx
    @cumburxx Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for enlighted us. I think 3DPC might be useful for build military bases(in warzones).

  • @datboinate0192
    @datboinate0192 Жыл бұрын

    Why didn’t he discuss more of the price in details

  • @KevinDavis338
    @KevinDavis338 Жыл бұрын

    Very informative video. I would like to get a 3d printed house. However, they are not ready for prime time yet (price-wise). Eventually, the price will come down and the building process will get better. I would like to see 3d printed houses built in Illinois and see how well it can survive severe weather like a Tornado.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah that’s true. So few people understand this. It’s so refreshing to read this comment.

  • @MicMaine
    @MicMaine7 ай бұрын

    For the issues of mix consistency and having to deal with different atmosphere conditions and weather based on location, why not make some kind of portable shield to put around the area you're printing so that you can create a controlled environment. This should reduce anomolies and help speed up dry times if you also make the shields have a drying feature. Food for thought...

  • @Sperminski

    @Sperminski

    7 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @francescocerioni8939

    @francescocerioni8939

    7 ай бұрын

    More problems than benefits with this solution

  • @MicMaine

    @MicMaine

    7 ай бұрын

    @@francescocerioni8939 isn't that what real 3-d printers have, a box surrounding them?

  • @Ponen77

    @Ponen77

    5 ай бұрын

    The most straightforward method will be to do a small test mix after taking environmental conditions into consideration, see how it fares, tweak it here and there and one should be good to go. Even regular construction is affected by local climatic conditions hence why for example when using concrete it's good to look up regional guidelines to get the best results, too much humidity during construction can affect the curing properties and structural strength can be compromised.

  • @eddybrevet6816

    @eddybrevet6816

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes, a shield, protection against wind, rain, there happens to be 1, fast, easy assemble, take down, cheap, reusable, large coverage, transportable, not much weight, available materials, tarp between wire mesh or other, reinforced with rebar

  • @StalinsGhost
    @StalinsGhost Жыл бұрын

    Jesus its so hard to find peer review and critique from the huge mass of marketing and promotions that have been vomited out.

  • @Brainiacmind2023
    @Brainiacmind2023 Жыл бұрын

    Where could I go to buy the system for 3d . Let’s work

  • @repalmore
    @repalmore Жыл бұрын

    ASTM have nothing to how a house is built. It ONLY has to do with testing of materials. ICBO is the standard many state and localities are or have adopted.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Municipalities may reference or adopt any standards they like. Just the existence of any standards at all is a step in the right direction.

  • @repalmore

    @repalmore

    Жыл бұрын

    @@automateconstruction ASTM is American Society for Testing and Materials. That's how you go about certifying if a material meets a certain standard. Like R rating for insulation or break strength for concrete. Absorption rates for CMU's or density of asphaltic concrete. ICBO is International Conference of Building Officials. These are the standards that will tell you if the stairs are up to "code". The two are completely different areas of the construction industry. ASTM also covers many things that are not even in the construction industry because they cover testing not codes. Been in construction industry for over 20 years and am certified in quite a few ASTM procedures.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@repalmore Look at ASTM 52939

  • @repalmore

    @repalmore

    Жыл бұрын

    @@automateconstruction 1 Scope This document defines quality assurance requirements for Additive Construction (AC) concerning building and construction projects in which additive manufacturing techniques are used for construction. The requirements are independent of the material/materials and process category used. QC for additive manufacturing, not a code for the design of the building. They do work hand in hand but one is not the other.

  • @beegee22
    @beegee229 ай бұрын

    Hasn't this technology matured yet to the point where they can eliminate that annoying horizontal ribbing from the printer layering? All I can see is crevice upon crevice for dust to collect on both inside and outside wall surfaces. It's still at the novelty phase.

  • @ireneswackyjournals8810

    @ireneswackyjournals8810

    8 ай бұрын

    Eventually yea by using a mold in the place so it dries straight. And I am sure eventually they will add the quicklime Roman ingredient that preserved concrete by allowing it to self heal cracks

  • @eattherich9215

    @eattherich9215

    7 ай бұрын

    A render can be applied. I saw another video where that was done to the outside and the inside walls.

  • @thecsucihai
    @thecsucihai Жыл бұрын

    OK, guys. I am sure most people don't expect their 3D printed home to be $10,000. Builders have an idea how much it cost to build a 3D printed home do they not? Just give the buyer an estimate cost per square feet. Everybody know it is still a new technology and price will change over time. Why make it sound so dramatic?

  • @aoeu256
    @aoeu256 Жыл бұрын

    Haha where is there a construction automation forum? I have so many ideas about 3D printers.

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ll have to make a free public forum on my site! Email me jarett@3dprinted.construction if you want to help me and be a moderator!

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe we should use discord or Reddit… lmk your thoughts!

  • @JohnVKaravitis
    @JohnVKaravitis Жыл бұрын

    Isn't it cheaper to have a factory-built house delivered and assembled on site?

  • @itoibo4208

    @itoibo4208

    8 ай бұрын

    it might be, if you want to use wood which is light weight for transportation. i like these thick, dense, walls. heating and cooling costs should be lower, with concrete, and they should be resistant to damage.

  • @S3l3ct1ve

    @S3l3ct1ve

    6 ай бұрын

    Heating and cooling costs wont be lower with concrete walls. The cheapest you can go is probably a house made from SIP panels. They are also less expensive and a lot faster to build on side. I also wouldnt be so sure about durability of these walls vs the traditional brick wall. These walls could be very prone to fractures and cracks. The foundation wont always be perfectly still, it can sink a little on one side of the house over the years, with the brick house it can crack a little, but with a house the crack will probably go through the whole construction. @@itoibo4208

  • @aaronb8698

    @aaronb8698

    2 ай бұрын

    Only in light hyw size spec housing, 3d printing will beat market in customization longevity and price per sq foot after fully integrated assembly is automated. What there doing wrong is not contrling thermal managment Plug in play Spool in electronic plumbing and H vac assembly inagratin with sip pre fab roofing all installed off same inclosed gantry.

  • @marko8095
    @marko8095 Жыл бұрын

    Great interview! What house is shown when you are talking about 4) just add water (5:17) ? is there a way to find more about that project?

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s the milestone project I visited it in Eindhoven you can watch the tour on my KZread channel. (Also it’s just in the video for nice visuals I’m not calling them out for the just add water thing, that wasn’t them.

  • @marko8095

    @marko8095

    Жыл бұрын

    @@automateconstruction Yeah, its this one: kzread.info/dash/bejne/gIWT27Snh9DZY8o.html

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    @@marko8095 Yep, funny story about that day... I was visiting Vertico and their CEO was kind enough to drive me over to the milestone house even though it's a Weber Beamix project (they are friends). The door happened to be open and a realtor was there who was kind enough to show us around and let me film. Pretty lucky I was able to get the footage!

  • @koreancontent1945
    @koreancontent19457 ай бұрын

    With all those curtains in your room, how is your room not sound treated? Still getting lots of reverb

  • @chrisharris1884
    @chrisharris1884 Жыл бұрын

    Like everything the hidden costs will never be shown until they hand you the bill.

  • @norryellzy3455
    @norryellzy3455Ай бұрын

    Where can I buy a concrete construction 3D printer over sea for a affordable price

  • @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461
    @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461 Жыл бұрын

    🤗👍 GREAT JOB JARETT 👏 👏👏YOUR FIGHTING THE FUD …this occurs in any disruptive tech.💚💚💚

  • @elizabethbennet4791

    @elizabethbennet4791

    Жыл бұрын

    bingo!! and people can be so immature about things in general LET ALONE novel things!!! jeesh!! they either literally think every house will cost $5,000 or that they dont have to purchase land. Like WHAT DID YOU THINK a 3d construction workers were going to do, choose and purchase you land from the government, like-???? so childish and lazy.

  • @sparksmcgee6641
    @sparksmcgee6641 Жыл бұрын

    Click bait "Lies!!" . It's just sales for his own program

  • @automateconstruction

    @automateconstruction

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s more than that, it’s an interview with the guy writing the ASTM standards for 3dcp that means something.

  • @aaronb8698
    @aaronb86982 ай бұрын

    All 3d prints should be done in a pop up tent incloser around gantry, to gain thermal control, and hoppers should have thermal managmet heaters fans and seniors to gain optimal control of materials, just like small printers get better prints when controlling environment. The driveway foundation and walls should all be done off the same gantry. The roofs should be done with pre fab SIPs and pre cut windows so install is extremely fast and can use same gantry crane system to reduce cost and time on install. H Vac Electrical and plumbing ( like pex) should be converted to a plug n play inlay system during print. Using a spool system by electrician/plumber operator. Inherently installing water power and ac/heat all in same print time without shutting down.(Should be abel to run power water and heat all before print is even finished) If you could print a house in 24h with fully installed appliances, you would not have a housing crisis anymore and cost could be considerably reduced to be affordable.

  • @seekerofthemutablebalance5228
    @seekerofthemutablebalance52286 ай бұрын

    My question is how do you get the Electrical Plumbing and insulation into a 3D printed house wall?

  • @allowmi
    @allowmi7 ай бұрын

    I think the marketing is skewed. You've got technology to print in virtually ANY shape, yet we're still seeing 90 degree angles and square openings... So we have the tools without the imagination. Then there's the application consistency. I'd wager some sort of cementitious media is necessary, but why not incorporate foam pellets (like in Styrofoam) to cut back on the cement needed and make the matrix lighter? You could then apply a hard coat stucco to even out the appearance or even enhance it. Ultimately I think we'll need method-specific fenestration and fixturing and glazing for it all to work. And to make THAT feasible, the base construction would need to be more economical. I think that would be achieved by computer modeling at the front end, so the design decisions and the economic decisions can be cohesively managed into something that beats the market.

  • @gjsoncloud9
    @gjsoncloud9 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! Imagine how many trees could be saved!

  • @realjettlag

    @realjettlag

    Жыл бұрын

    Because of course you can grow new rock. 🙄 Maybe it's my multigenerational background in managed forestry, but it's always laughable when I see/hear these kinds of comments. People prefering plastics and other non-renewable resources over a crop that is regrown continually because they want to "save trees" shows they don't really care about environmental concerns and don't plan to be around long enough to witness the ruination of the only inhabitable planet we have. Or maybe their experience with trees is limited to a copse in their local park. I always wonder what they eat if they're so hell-bent on saving renewable vegetation over non-renewable materials-Quarry cereal, maybe. "But you can recycle plastic!" Is that what you were going to say? Do you have any idea how that's done, how efficient it is, what chemicals are involved, and what the quality actually is of 100% recycled petroleum products? There's a reason you don't see "100% recycled material" on most petroleum-based recycled products. Not to mention how quickly and into what components it breaks down into the surrounding ground water and soil (much more quickly than you think; that "1000 years" thing is bullshit and that's not a good thing), especially with UV exposure. Paper, on the other hand, is manufactured with fewer and less volatile chemical compounds, can actually be recycled (again with fewer chemicals), and wood can be reused, repurposed, and recycled without the vulnerabilities of plastics. As a building material, it's actually quite flexible. Adding an outlet or a moving a staircase is relatively easy. As for "3D printed" homes, it's merely extruded concrete (not really new, my dad was doing this in the 1940s while working with the US Army Corps of Engineers), not really a new miracle product, just new(ish) packaging, delivery, and trendy label. Concrete is an excellent building material, but as someone else pointed out elsewhere in these comments, it's hard to regulate quality, moisture, etc, on-site (not to mention site access limitations and the costs of setting up and maintaining the delivery system). They made a good case for more affordable, flexible, and quality controllable prefabricated materials already available and in use. Transportation costs are going to be similar as well, since a similar amount of any building material would have to be brought to the site, and in the case of "3D printing" you're also moving the massive apparatus both to and from the site. Maybe someday, but this just isn't ready for prime time or budget housing. Aesthetically, it's interesting and looks nice. Right now, that's the best argument for it, if buyers prefer this aesthetic over others.

  • @montyboyb3855
    @montyboyb38557 ай бұрын

    Everything should be different! A certain group of people want everyone to do everything their one way and this is the cause of suffering along with greed and power

  • @kitmarshall4084
    @kitmarshall4084 Жыл бұрын

    what happens if there a huge crack? there's no rebar or anything that reenforce like in concrete

  • @kevyjo
    @kevyjo8 ай бұрын

    I think all these shortcomings are like DUH...but I think the concept shows incredible promise if people use imagination and intelligence...machines, materials, infrastructure, and environmental interfaces could improve by leaps and bounds....

  • @lamebubblesflysohigh
    @lamebubblesflysohigh7 ай бұрын

    It is the future. Especially here in Europe where stick houses never became popular. Majority of housing is built from prefabs, cinder blocks or bricks.

  • @michaeljames5936
    @michaeljames59363 ай бұрын

    Re cost- If shipping and assembly of the equipment is a very large component of cost, would constructing 100 houses in the same area and thus sharing those costs out by a lot* make DCP cheaper? *We're assuming people are prepared to 'wait their turn', while the houses are constructed, rather than 100 machines arriving. (But, Hey! It's only 24 hours a house, if I heard you right.)

  • @sirrodneyffing1
    @sirrodneyffing1 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. So far I see zero material benefit in this technology.

  • @XX-qp8bh
    @XX-qp8bh Жыл бұрын

    Thanks to open my eyes 👍

  • @qa1e2r4
    @qa1e2r46 ай бұрын

    there is a problem they don't address in construction 3D printing and that is the physical dimentions. Current printers are nothing more than scaled up from the regular hoby type printers so they are very restrained on productivity because of it. Construction sites are much much larger and the machine it self are made to scale with them as they imitate hoby printers. On a construction site you can have a few nozles working around the building. Minimum of 4 each starting at their corner and working in the same circular matter is the minimum such systems should do. Using one nozle for a 20x20m site is just lack of imagination. Also the whole crane like structures for navigations are not optimal. Lazer/optical sensors can do the same and drop down the installation time by factors.

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