If you鈥檙e the type of person that looks at the usual suspects labeled 鈥渋nnovation technology鈥 鈥 I鈥檓 looking at you, Smart Goggles 鈥 and thinks, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 great for someone with a ton of expendable income, but what鈥檚 in it for me?鈥 you wouldn鈥檛 be the first. Ironically, while the purpose of most forms of technology throughout history was to make the human existence easier, much of what鈥檚 considered disruptive as-of-late is a few fingers out of reach for the average joe. After all, it鈥檚 tough to get truly excited about things like and when you know you鈥檙e going to be up at 5 a.m. the next morning tying rebar鈥y hand. That鈥檚 why we, at Faber, are excited by the prospect of 3D printing becoming genuinely useful to those of us in the construction industry, and to the average consumer.
3D printing 鈥 what is it, exactly?
Let鈥檚 start with the basics. What is 3D printing? In a nutshell, it鈥檚 the manufacturing of a physical object using a digital prototype. While the process can involve the use of various combinations of computers, machines, and robots, it uses technology to build structures by adding many layers of material together. This is why the field is called
How is it being used?
Back to your original question: What鈥檚 in it for you/me? , as 3D printing matures and expands as a field, developers and business-people alike begin to ask themselves, 鈥淗ow do we make this more affordable and accessible to the average consumer?鈥 or, further, 鈥淗ow can we use this to solve common problems worldwide? At Faber, we think the answers to these questions come from experiments in three different areas: scale, density, and materials.
Scale
Just like with Tesla, the 3D printing of housing structures didn鈥檛 start with models accessible to the average consumer. Notice, for example, that in , the castle came before the micro-cabin. However, we鈥檙e starting to see companies shift their focus toward that could, for example, provide shelter after a natural disaster.
Density
Here鈥檚 the problem with building castles. While they were once constructed to protect an entire town or village鈥檚 army (see Netflix鈥檚 ), the population now living in them is鈥 non-existent. While mansions are, similarly, fun to gawk at, they do little to address housing needs. In Vancouver, where Faber was founded, we have a serious problem with a rapidly growing population and a serious lack of dense housing. That鈥檚 why we were excited to see , which 鈥 in addition to fitting more than a single person or family 鈥 聽boasted a 30 to 60 percent reduction in construction waste.
Materials
Speaking of waste, what about using dirt and garbage as 3D printing materials? a way to print structures out of soil, and is now looking for a commercial partner to bring the idea to market. Even better: a team at UCLA鈥檚 Centre for Innovation recently
In short, these are all ideas that we, as leaders within the construction industry, should get behind. Admittedly, it鈥檒l be a long while before the majority of us see 3D printing enter the mainstream construction market 鈥 which will give our workforces time to adjust. However, we鈥檙e looking forward to seeing how this form of technology can contribute to a sustainable construction industry, serving the average consumer.



