Yahoo – AFP, Charles Onians, 23 January 2013
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handout computer generated image shows a house designed by Dutch architecture practice Universe Architecture on January 14, 2013. |
A Dutch
architect has designed a house "with no beginning or end" to be built
using the world's largest 3D printer, harnessing technology that may one day be
used to print houses on the moon.
Janjaap
Ruijssenaars, 39, of Universe Architecture in Amsterdam, wants to print a
Mobius strip-shaped building with around 1,100 square metres (12,000 square
feet) of floor space using the massive D-Shape printer.
The
printer, designed by Italian Enrico Dini, can print up to almost a
six-metre-by-six-metre square (20-foot-by-20-foot), using a computer to add
layers 5-10 mm (a quarter to half an inch) thick.
Ruijssenaars
says the building could serve as a home or a museum and would have parts
usually made from concrete printed using broken up rocks and an emulsion
binding, while steel and glass would provide the facade.
"It's
our ambition to have the first printed house, this printer has made art or
objects for sea defences, but this is the first time to build something that
can be lived in," he told AFP.
Ruijssenaars
said the plan was not initially to print the building but the hi-tech medium
turned out to be the most appropriate.
"We
started to ask the question if a building can be like the landscape, in order
to make a building that would not harm the landscape, or at least learn from
the landscape," he said.
"We
analysed that the essence of landscape is that it has no beginning or ending,
so it's continuous, not only the fact the world is round but also water goes
into land, valleys into mountains, it's always continuous."
The
Mobius-strip shaped result bears a striking resemblance to the art of another
Dutchman, 20th-century designer and illustrator M C Escher.
"In
this design he's definitely been an inspiration, I would say he's the king of
Mobius strips in drawing," Ruijssenaars said.
When trying
to make a small model of the building, Ruijssenaars realised that whatever
material you use, from paper to lead, "you have to make a strip and then
bend it in order to make this Mobius strip."
"But
with a 3D printer, even a small model, we could make the whole structure from
bottom to top without anyone seeing where it is beginning or ending," he
said.
Working
with Dutch mathematician and artist Rinus Roelofs and Dini in Italy, "we
put the whole thing in the computer," the architect said.
A Brazilian
national park has expressed interest in the building, which would cost around
four million euros ($5.3 million) to construct, the architect said, or it could
be built as a private home in the United States.
The project
would take around 18 months to build and the printer "might be active for
half a year," Ruijssenaars said.
"The
challenge is demonstrating that it's possible to print real buildings in 3D and
affirm that there is a new way to manufacture buildings," Dini, 50, said
by telephone from Italy.
Dini, who
gave up his well-paid job in robotics designing prototypes for the footwear
industry to build his monster printer, said that 3D printing of buildings
remains a hybrid process with other building techniques for reinforcement.
"And
it's about being competitive with other construction techniques," he said.
One
advantage of using printing is that you can easily build-in empty spaces for
plumbing and electrics -- and that you can use rocks found in situ at the
construction site, which could be almost anywhere.
"The
great thing about the printer is that you can take it somewhere and then print
with the ground you find on location," Ruijssenaars said.
"So
you could take the printer to the moon, assemble it there and print with moon
material."


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