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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Snowshoe who wrote (130589)2/17/2017 7:13:17 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217545
 
re << youtube.com >>

that was beautiful. would love to have those guys on my team.



To: Snowshoe who wrote (130589)2/17/2017 7:40:38 PM
From: TobagoJack3 Recommendations

Recommended By
Elroy Jetson
Julius Wong
Pogeu Mahone

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217545
 
... and to think, and giggle politely, or LOL, that there are those who believe neo-globalisation can be turned back, people would stop building after being bombed back into the stone ages, or otherwise turn away hospitals and railroads

the next phase of export shall come inside of a ship, a robot together w/ a printer, to print out more robots and printers, on just-in-time-pay-as-you-go basis, w/ internet-link to a design cloud server operated by some villager 10k km away via quantum-entanglement enhanced communication satellite, to confound the telecom experts of yester-year should they fail to exercise diligence

3ders.org

Iraqi government looking at WinSun's 3D printed homes for post-war rebuilding effortsAug 18, 2016 | By Alec



While it has taken years, it is starting to look like a turning point is being reached in the Syrian Civil War – which spilled over into Iraq and saw the rise of ISIS. In fact, ISIS is increasingly being pushed out of Iraq altogether. But even if a swift end to the war is in sight, the troubles for the local population won’t suddenly go away. We’ve all seen the images of countless destroyed cities and towns where people are forced to live in inhuman circumstances, and that life won’t change for years. But the Iraqi government is looking at quick solutions, and might have found them in 3D printed homes.

This is not even just a quirky suggestion, as the Iraqi government has already looked at various practical options. Just a few days ago, a delegation featuring representatives from the Iraqi Ministries of Planning, Housing, Finance, Water Resources, and from the Ministry of Finance and Economy of Iraqi Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Regional Planning Department, travelled to the WinSun’s Suzhou office, China to look at the 3D printed homes. The delegation was led by the Assistant Director of the Iraqi Ministry of Planning, Abbas Fadi Abbas Ka Demi.





WinSun is one of the world leaders in construction 3D printing technology. Back in 2014, Winsun made headlines all over the internet for building not one, but ten 3D printed houses in less than 24 hours. Since then, Shanghai WinSun Decoration Design Engineering Company, to give its full name, has been following up their initial success with one 3D printed concrete creation after another. Back in March, they even unveiled two gorgeous 3D printed Chinese courtyards, inspired by the ancient Suzhou gardens.

But WinSun has been particularly working hard to scale up the technology, and even the Saudi Arabian government has been looking to WinSun for 3D printed homes – with recent discussions focusing on the construction of a staggering 1.5 million 3D printed housing units over a five year period. While the Iraqi government isn’t thinking on such a scale just yet, they are recognizing the potential of construction 3D printing– which could greatly speed up the production and construction of new housing units in northern Iraq, which has been torn apart by war since 2014.









During the meeting at WinSun, the Iraqi delegation was therefore particularly interested in practical issues, and discussed the possibility of sponsoring 10,000 housing projects in Iraq. Alternatively, they are also interested in directly purchasing 3D construction printers for post-war rehabilitation. While discussions are still in the very earliest stages, it’s clear that 3D printing could play a huge role in the Middle East.

During the visit to Suzhou, the delegation was also shown around the famous creations of WinSun, which are all built at the WinSun HQ test site. Among others, the Iraqi delegation visited the world’s tallest 3D printed apartment building, featuring six floors not counting the ground floor, and the world’s first 3D printed villa – a 1,000 square meter home that has been particularly popular with visitors. Both were unveiled in January 2015, to critical acclaim. But WinSun has clearly been working hard since then, as the Iraqi delegation also saw several new creations, such as 3D printed water wells and even a septic tank (visible below).









But that is not all. Over the past few months, WinSun has also 3D printed an underground piping infrastructure for urban construction projects, 3D printed steel housing and 3D printed moveable buildings (such as nursing homes and hotels). They are also looking at providing international training for their 3D printing tech. But perhaps most ambitious is the company’s plan to 3D print a 100m tall structure – for which it is currently seeking approval.



At the same time WinSun has been working hard to push their ‘Dream Factory’ project, aimed at setting up more than a hundred 3D printing factories in China. So far, they’ve exported the concept to eleven other cities, including Dubai and Shanghai. The China Railway 24th Bureau Group Co Ltd will be building one of these factories in Shanghai, while another is being built in Baotou City in Inner Mongolia. There, it will be part of a 0.67 square kilometers 3D printing park, with a projected output of 452 million USD over the next five years. It will also serve as a hub for a further eleven 3D printing factories throughout the Inner Mongolia region of China.

Regardless of whether or not these Middle Eastern 3D printing plans materialize, it’s clear that WinSun is not resting on their laurels. Commercial construction 3D printing is quickly becoming a reality.










To: Snowshoe who wrote (130589)2/17/2017 8:29:52 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217545
 
some controversy

and i am guessing

either typical and expected whining from dr khoshnevis (voted for trump?) simply out-played by astute competition, or

trying to patent fire and failed.

in all cases, first to market wins.

race is on.

3dprint.com

Exclusive: How Winsun Stole IP from Contour Crafting and Is "Faking" Their 3D Printed Homes & Apartments
Brian Krassenstein
Probably the story we receive the most emails about and residual traffic from is the one we did about a Chinese company called Winsun. Winsun made major headlines twice over the last year alone, despite the fact that there is very little public information available about the company themselves. The first story broke in April of last year when they allegedly ‘3D printed’ 10 houses in a single day. Initially we wrote it off as an April Fools prank, as the news was in fact released on April 1st. Immediately upon hearing this story we became a bit skeptical. 10 houses in a day? Is that even possible? Once again there really wasn’t a whole lot of information online from the company about this process, and when we reached out for further evidence, they simply ignored our correspondence. Despite this, other media outlets ran with the story and the company never blinked an eye.

Once again in January of this year the same company came forward, this time with claims that they had 3D printed an entire 6-story apartment building along with an exquisite mansion. We reached out for additional details on how this was done, and once again no response.

Khoshnevis’ Contour Crafting technology

It was a couple of months ago when I personally had the opportunity to interview Dr. Berok Khoshnevis, a man many would call the Grandfather of House Printing. He is the inventor of a process of 3D printing large structures called Coutour Crafting, and according to an interview he conducted with us plans to begin selling his machines within a year or two to construction companies around the world. Dr. Khoshnevis is a genius when it comes to both construction and 3D printing, at least as far as we are concerned. It was in our conversations with him that we realized what’s likely the truth behind Winsun, a company that Dr. Khoshnevis, as well as his former student Dr. Jing Zhang, is unfortunately all too familiar with.

Dr. Berok Khoshnevis

In the interview we published with Dr. Khoshnevis back in March, he explained to us that Winsun has made several false claims and, even worse, stole his intellectual property. After we heard this we decided to dive a bit deeper into these allegations, contacting Dr. Khoshnevis’ student at the time Dr. Jing Zhang for his side of the story, recontacting Dr. Khoshnevis, and reaching out, unsuccessfully, to Winsun themselves.

Dr. Jing Zhang, who has worked extensively with Dr. Khoshnevis on his Contour Crafting technology, currently runs his own company, SprintRay, which produces SLA 3D printers for consumers and small businesses. Dr. Zhang is also in line to head up the Chinese branch of Contour Crafting once launched at a later date.

“Winsun’s CEO came to LA, saw our work, then invited me to his company, brought his materials and asked me to demonstrate the consistency needed for his material to work with Contour Crafting,” Dr. Khoshnevis informed 3DPrint.com. “Copying the idea is one wrong action but another wrong action was for him to claim in the media that he had the idea before me, when there is no evidence, official or unofficial, showing that this man ever did anything in 3D Printing of concrete (or any 3D printing) prior to 2014.”



How Khosnevis will construct large multi-story buildings

In fact, Dr. Zhang informed us that Mr. Ma from Winsun actually had no idea about the capabilities of 3D printing until Zhang himself walked him through an Expo featuring the technology, in 2013:

“Prof. Khoshnevis gave my information to Mr. Ma and asked him to contact me when he came back to China,” Dr. Zhang explained to us. “I received a call from him around March or April. He told me that he was seeking an opportunity to work with Khoshnevis and hoped that I could connect the two of them (he couldn’t speak English). I went to Shanghai and met with him several times. In May 2013, I went to Beijing for the first 3D Printing Expo in China [Which Ma was also attending]. At that time, he had NO idea what 3D printing was at all. I walked him through the expo and spent a couple hours giving him some basic knowledge about 3D printing. He was very excited about it. Mr. Ma tried to persuade me to build a prototype of the [Countour Crafting] machine for him. I told him that I could only do that with Prof. Khoshnevis’ permission because he is the inventor of the technology. I also told him to have a meeting with Prof. Khoshnevis if he wants further cooperation.”

Obviously Dr. Khoshnevis did not give this permission to Winsun, but agreed to fly out to China and meet with Ma himself in August 2013. Ma, Dr. Khoshnevis, and Dr. Zhang all met to discuss possible cooperation. According to Dr. Zhang, Dr. Khoshnevis showed Ma some of his technology and how it worked. At this point Ma had promised to show the men a new method for pumping concrete which was taking place at Winsun’s factory. Later, however, excuses were made, with Ma telling the men that since they are foreign they were not permitted inside the facility according to company rules. At the end of the meeting Dr. Khoshnevis refused any sort of cooperation agreement, at which point Ma proposed one final joint venture offer, stating, according to Dr. Zhang, “I am going to build it or fake it anyway.”

The so-called ‘3D printed apartment building’ by Winsun

Needless to say, no such partnership was ever formed, but Ma seems to be making good on his promise to Dr. Khoshnevis of faking it.

“I am surprised that so many individuals in the media have fallen into his story that he is the creator of 3D construction printing technology, with 12 years 3D printing experience, when instead he bought his very first MakerBot FDM machine in May 2013 (with me),” Dr. Zhang told us.



The sophisticated extrusion technology being used by Contour Crafting

Basically what Winsun is allegedly doing is using technology and ideas which Ma was able to learn about from Dr. Khoshnevis’ visit to China. They are allegedly using these patented techniques in order to create their own subpar system. They aren’t 3D printing homes or apartment buildings. Instead they are printing small sections of walls, within their own facility using a very expensive 5-axis gantry system from Italy, which they then simply fit with a concrete pump. The extremely heavy walls then need to be loaded onto a truck, transported to a building site, and then offloaded and constructed. According to both Dr. Zhang and Dr. Khoshnevis, this technology, which doesn’t have a single patent backing it, is neither efficient nor revolutionary, and instead is much more expensive and inefficient than current manufacturing techniques.

As Dr. Khoshnevis continues his tireless work on rolling out his very own Contour Crafting platform within the next two years, and Dr. Zhang continues building upon his very own company, SprintRay (they intend to launch a Kickstarter campaign here very soon), Ma will likely continue to try to deceive the media in an attempt to perhaps garner investments and attention from a technology he had absolutely no experience working with just 23 months prior.

Let’s hear your thoughts on this story. Discuss in the 3D Printed House Wars forum thread on 3DPB.com.




To: Snowshoe who wrote (130589)2/17/2017 8:31:52 PM
From: Elroy Jetson  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 217545
 
Just a bit further along is the same process more automated with fewer workers.




To: Snowshoe who wrote (130589)2/17/2017 8:42:19 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217545
 
another ‘fake’ printed home

3dprint.com

Chinese Construction Company 3D Prints an Entire Two-Story House On-Site in 45 Days
Clare Scott
How long does it take to build a house? Obviously it depends on the size of the house and other factors, but somewhere around six or seven months is a good estimate. Chinese construction company HuaShang Tengda thinks that’s pretty funny, and have essentially laughed in the face of traditional construction by 3D printing a 400-square-meter, two-story house in a mere month and a half.

Beijing-based HuaShang Tengda is a major competitor of fellow Chinese construction company WinSun, which we’ve followed in the past since they surprised us with their 3D printed homes, including a six-story apartment building and a mansion. Not long after that, WinSun’s reputation was tarnished by quite of bit of controversy when Dr. Berokh Khoshnevis, creator of the revolutionary Contour Crafting technique of 3D printing buildings, stated that the Shanghai company had blatantly stolen his patented technology and were passing it off as their own. Moreover, Dr. Khoshnevis said, WinSun’s claim that they were 3D printing entire homes was untrue; in fact, they were 3D printing small sections of walls and then cobbling them together on-site using other construction methods.

HuaShang Tengda appears to be something different altogether. Their two-story villa was printed entirely on-site in a unique process that looks quite different from other 3D printed construction techniques we’ve seen. The team first erects the frame of the house, complete with rebar support and plumbing pipes, and then prints over it with their gigantic 3D printer, which only recently completed testing after several years of development. The printer, as seen in the video below, has a sort of forked extruder that simultaneously lays concrete on both sides of the structural material, swallowing it up and encasing it securely within the walls.

The printing material itself is ordinary Class C30 concrete, an extremely tough, durable yet inexpensive material, and HuaShang Tengda states that any cement material can be used with the process, so that other construction firms can take advantage of what is locally available. Twenty tons of the concrete were used to print the 250cm-thick walls of the villa, and seismic testing showed that the structure should be capable of withstanding an earthquake as strong as 8 on the Richter scale – that’s a strength that has flattened cities.

The technology, according to HuaShang Tengda, was developed entirely in-house and is controlled by custom-designed software that consists of four “systems”: an electronic ingredient formulating system, a concrete mixing system, a transmission system and a 3D printing system. The versatile printer, the company says, can be used to print buildings of any size and shape, including high-rise apartment buildings as well as structures with unconventional shapes that wouldn’t be feasible with other construction methods.

“(This technology) will have immeasurable social benefits,” HuaShang Tengda states. “Particularly the use of the new rural construction can now improve farmers’ living conditions. Because of its speed, low cost, simple and environmentally friendly raw materials, (it can) generally improve the quality of people’s lives. If to be used in developing countries, international competitive bidding in a great competitive advantage, the use of mechanical devices to reduce administrative costs and operating costs.”



I hesitate to use too many superlatives when talking about a new process, machine or material; we’ve heard a lot of 3D printing-related inventions described as being the next thing to turn a particular industry on its head, and that’s not always the case. WinSun’s claims turned out to be too good to be true, but HuaShang’s technology really does look like the real thing. Beyond the speed and low cost of the process, the fact that it can allegedly withstand all but the very strongest of earthquakes could save millions of lives – an idea that should be very appealing indeed to earthquake-prone China and many other regions. Watch the process for yourself below, and discuss further over in the Two-Story 3D Printed Villa forum at 3DPB.com.




To: Snowshoe who wrote (130589)2/17/2017 8:43:25 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217545
 
unsure of what the doc khoshnevis was complaining about

that the house was not built, or not built w/ his machine, or what

youtube.com

... but i cannot determine if the doc voted for trump or not ;0)