Meet Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis, who is the designer of this awesome gadget. According to him, what they are doing is ‘basically scaling up 3D printing to the scale of building.’ Well, bravo professor! The technology is being called Contour Crafting and this will no doubt revolutionize the construction industry and how it operates.
So how does this Contour Crafting work really? Basically the Contour Crafting system is a robot which has an array of tools that are used by workers and they allow it to build 3D objects. Brad lemley from Discovery magazine said; ‘Ultimately it would work like this; On a cleared and leveled site, workers would lay down two rails a few feet further apart than the eventual building’s width and a computer-controlled contour crafter would take over from there. A gantry-type crane with a hanging nozzle and a components-placing arm would travel along the rails. The nozzle would spit out concrete in layers to create hollow walls, and then fill in the walls with additional concrete… humans would hang doors and insert windows.’
Khoshnevis further elaborates; ‘It’s a CAD/CAM solution; designed on computer and built by a computer. Contour Crafting hopes to generate entire neighborhoods built at a fraction of the cost, in a fraction of the time, far more safely, and with architectural flexibility that is unprecedented.
No, the structures built by Contour Crafting won’t look alike. Remember, the building is built as per design so all you need to do is to alter the design and there you go.
Khoshnevis, in this context, said; ‘every [Contour Crafted] building can be different. They do not have to look like track houses because all you have to do is change a computer program.’ Furthermore, this Contour Crafting will allow for more complex structures to be built quite easily, like Khoshnevis told us; ‘The walls can be curved. You can have very exotic architectural features without incurring additional costs.’
One may argue that this technology will put out a lot of workers from their jobs and Khoshnevis responds with this; ‘There is concern about people being put out of construction jobs. The reality is that a lot of new jobs can be created in this sector as well. Construction is a hazardous job. It is more dangerous than mining and agriculture. It kills 10,000 people every year [and] because of all the different trade and managements structures, the process is pretty corruption prone. It is very costly and always over budget.’
Nasa and Cal-Earth Institute are funding the research and Khoshnevis seems quite hopeful about this technology making it to the top when he says; ‘This technology is like a rock that we have rolled to the top of a cliff. Just one little push and the idea will roll along on its own.’