Shanghai Company 3D Prints 6-Story Apartment Building and Villa
ErnieKey writes Last year, a Shanghai based company made news by 3d printing a bunch of houses. Now that same company, WinSun has accomplished something never seen before. They have successfully 3d printed a 6-story apartment building as well as an incredibly detailed home. The structures were unveiled at the Suzhou Industrial Park. "These two houses are in full compliance with the relevant national standards," Ma Rongquan, the Chief engineer of China Construction No.8 Engineering Bureau, explained. "It is safe, reliable, and features a good integration of architecture and decoration. But as there is no specific national standard for 3D printing architecture, we need to revise and improve such a standard for the future."
and how will that standard be published and disseminated?
2D printers sigh with relief, they are still relevant
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Sure it seems cheap, but have you seen the prices on the refill cartridges? Outrageous!
John
And yet summary says 6...
One of TFA says 5 stories and the other FA says 6 stories. I guess it all depends on how you like to count. But I am going with 5 stories as that is the number of windows high the apartment block is, and that particular FA seems to be the more authoritative one.
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
This is simply a way to cast concrete in a factory and then wheel the parts to the construction site.
You still need to add all the plumbing, wiring, windows, doors, flooring, etc...
Settle down with the hyperbole already.
It's not any different from using factory-trimmed wood or pre-cast concrete steps.
But just say "3D printing" and the mindless hype starts and brains turn off everywhere.
The printed part is a concrete skeleton that acts as a form that needs to cure and then be filled with concrete. None of the finishing work is printed. It is basically a cast-concrete structure, where the typical metal forms were replaced with a 3D-printed skeleton. Of course the printed skeleton is a couple orders of magnitude rougher than what you'd get with metal forms, so the walls need heavy finishing before they can be presentable.
What they've done is perhaps a step in the right direction, but they are very, very far from truly 3D-printing an entire building. First of all, they'll need to have an inline concrete mixer that can continuously mix a fast-curing mix, so that they could print shapes that are filled-in. They also need to change the shape of the nozzle so that the deformed (compressed) shape will be rectangular, and not oval as it is now. They really did everything without much thought or understanding of what it takes to do it right. It is, at best, cargo cult 3D printing. They did all the right moves without understanding what it really takes to do it.
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.