This 3-D-printed house costs $10,000 and can be built in 24 hours
Now this is something that borders on genius, you can replace all the shanties in the world with something durable and useful, let alone able to go up quickly. Genius.
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Here is some stuff I found looking for the article:
http://www.monolithic.org/homes/featu...
http://disastersafehomes.com/lessons....
Hasten, Jason, fetch the basin.
If they're interested in smoothing it over, they'll figure it out. Perhaps some sort of shaping components immediately after the extrusion head.
I have a feeling they may have gone down that path and found two major advantages to that textured approach:
1) Less cost to build the house: Just a spray head and no complicated shaping equipment to maintain.
2) The acoustics inside such a house would have more echo if everything were smooth. With the present log-like appearance, the interior is probably quieter with less echo.
I like the idea. My biggest concern would lie in the necessity for a perfectly stable exterior to support the 3D printer hardware. 24 hours to build the house is fantastic, but what would happen if the ground were soft (squishy) or unstable (sandy soil)?
I have a feeling they're well on their way to settling those matters too.
Trump admin caught wind of it and sent in troops to break in the warehouse and give the supplies to the contractors and "Wala!" 80% of the island had electricity in days...
Not word one in the lamestream...
Pour some cement in a mixture,push a button , and
have a machine press the wet cement in between
boards to make walls, and a floor? (Don't try to tell me that a cement roof could be made that way, even if it were part of the house, it would have to be made separately.
Odds are, they can probably shrink the machine down to something that would fit in the back of a truck, just drive it off the dock to the site, hook it up to a cement bag and start pumping. The goal is to probably take out the middle man.
The $10,000 obviously isn't for the materials, it's probably estimated wear and tear, maintenance, repairs, and depreciation on the equipment per-use (which probably costs in the millions).
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