onsdag den 9. maj 2012

Print dit hus


In a forest north of Copenhagen, Danish architects Frederik Agdrup and Nicholas Bjorndal of Eentileen used just a computer, a printer and 820 sheets of plywood to build a 125 square meter (1,345 square foot) home in four weeks. Named Villa Asserbo, the home is the pilot project of Eentileen’s Print a House project.



Pilotprojekt - Det digitalt fabrikerede hus. Danmarks første digitalt fabrikerede bolig. 800 plader bæredygtig krydsfiner er omdannet til 400 byggekomponenter, som tilsammen udgør en bolig midt i skoven i Asserbo. Projektet er udført i samarbejde med FACIT UK fra London og er støttet af bl.a Statens Kunstfond, UPM-Kymmene, NKT fasteners og Superwood.
The designers are touting the process of mass-customizing houses and responsibly producing them on site.
Matthew Stock’s video report for Reuters presents the first Danish digitally fabricated house, and what its designers hope will be the house of the future.
Eentileen’s Print a House process begins as a 3D model which is translated into a manufacturing template and sent to a printer, i.e. a CNC machine. The CNC machine, a computerized milling machine, then cuts sheets of plywood into pieces that can be slotted and fitted together. The architects developed their method to maximize efficiency, minimize environmental impact, and reduce construction errors in the building process. Agdrup and Bjorndal say that their Print a House method allows a house to be built by two people without heavy machinery.

Se denne hjemmeside - Kurtzweil, Accelerating Intelligence eller denne blog

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