These 3D Printing Houses Might Be The Answer To Homelessness

Aadhya Khatri


These 3D Printing Houses Might Be The Answer To Homelessness

The 3D printing house has one bathroom, two bedrooms, and took approximately a day’s time to complete

Back in May, we have had the chance to see a seemingly wild idea of 3D printing a whole neighborhood of New Story, a nonprofit housing company. At that time, what we had is just rendering plans but now, one of such houses has just been completed, the first in a series of 49 more in Mexico.

The house is measure 152-square-meter and was built by a 3D printer called the Vulcan II, developed by Icon, a construction technology company based in Austin, the USA. The house has one bathroom, two bedrooms, and took approximately a day’s time to complete. However, the whole constructing process is spaced out over several days.

3d-printing-houses-new-story
The house is measure 152-square-meter and was built by a 3D printer called the Vulcan II, developed by Icon, a construction technology company based in Austin, the USA

Such houses are for families whose monthly income is lower than $80 (around Rs. 5000). Many of them are living in shacks that provide little to no protection over the harsh weather.

According to Alexandria Lafci, co-founder of New Story, the majority of families are about to move into the 3D printing houses have never had a plumbing system before.

Such houses are for families whose monthly income is lower than $80 (around Rs. 5000)

With the first houses constructed, there is new hope for families with so low an income that they can hardly afford a proper place to live. This initial success may serve as an encouragement for them to take a chance on 3D printing homes.

Brett Hagler, New Story’s CEO said that the company wanted to prove that it was possible to bring such a machine to a Mexican rural area and print out adequate homes. He hoped that once people saw the house with their own eyes, the idea of 3D printing a whole neighborhood would not be so wild anymore.