Be patient while the presentation loads and you may need to allow popups for the slide show (press s).
Focuses on Canal House but includes shots of 10 Houses in 24 hours, and Contour Crafting.
Her clothes change during the video (distracting) but good details about the project. Substantial overlap with previous video. Site link requires flash :( There is information on it about:
This is a news report from China English-language news channel about a private company (WinSun Decoration Design Engineering Co.) that printed buildings that are being used as offices. They refer to them as houses and in the western sense of the word this is generous, but for a rapid construction process this is impressive. Also buildings like these could easily be used as emergency shelters.
Associated Press (AP) news reporting about the same company (WinSun Decoration Design Engineering Co.) building other projects. FYI 1100 m2 is the same as 11840 ft2.
Click through if iframe does not show to see some of the assembly process.
When this was filmed the speaker (Behrokh Khoshnevis) was a professor of Industrial & Systems Engineering. This was filmed back in 2012 but it is the most impressive project in that it displays some of the most advanced techniques. These include on site robotic assembly of parts of the structure.
He was also Director of Manufacturing Engineering Graduate Program at the University of Southern California (USC).
The scrolling banner includes a picture of three students supported by a printed concrete truss structure. It also has infomation about NASA's interest in using of 3D printing of stuctures.
A contractor that just built his own 3D printer. In early 2014 he was moving forward with printing a full size house.
Not just concrete and plastic. Very organic design since you don't need to include the parts of the structure that are not needed.
Includes an artist's image of printing a bridge in a park (I think) but also includes some shots of 3D printed material close up.
More material, more properties, much much faster.
This is slow but it is a new process. There will be refinements and the speed will improve.
Our very own 3D printing lab, complete with laser cutters too. There is a fee that will give you access for more than a little more than a semester at a time. They are currently looking into aquiring a 3D printer that extrudes ceramic material (still small though).
Maybe your professor (Ravi) can help with some grant applications to develop a 3D printer so we can print our own castles here?