this post was submitted on 13 Jul 2026
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Technology
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The video isn't really about 3D printing houses, it's mostly about corruption, scams, grifters, con artists, burocracy and idiots. It uses a very ominous tone that is very emotionally appealing and click-baity. What it has to say about actual 3D printing houses is very little:
One house had cracks, concrete is hard. 3D printing with clay takes a week to dry, that is soooo long. Concrete produces so much CO2!!! Where are the regulations!? But they also invented carbon neutral concrete and are experimenting with new binders and aggregates. They 3D printed a 2 story house in earthquakey japan, but OH MY GOD it's inspired by a cave! I CAVE!!! Who wants to live in a CAVE?!?!?
A video like this is using the same type of emotional manipulation to feed the algorithm and engagement like the grifters in their example do. It's disgusting to me.
3D printing houses has huge potential, it's just in it's infancy, and maybe not well suited to develop in the capitalist housing market. There are breakthroughs to control less precise robotics, self driving and SLAM that will allow this to be even cheaper and more flexible. Building materials to develop and software and tools to develop. Just look at plastic 3D printers and how they were held back for years by patents and capitalist interests.
The potential is there to not just 3D print rough structures, but intricately painted and sculpted beautiful structures... out of literal dirt on site. With new binders we could make use of local materials instead of transporting sand across the world. And not just one house, but a whole village for e.g. the millions of refugees from natural catastrophes we can expect over the next century.
There is an obvious potential for further automization, like have a robot dig holes and 3D print foundations, save on transportation costs, use new materials, circumvent long and exploitative industrial supply chains for building materials, print foam insulation. Have different "robot end effectors" to insert wiring and piping while printing, or place structural elements for roofing. Even a hybrid approach between 3D printing and brick laying could be useful. Scan a quarry of a million natural stones and puzzle them together.
Don't just 3D print the framing, but finish and paint the walls too. And 3D print the kitchen and cabinet furniture and bathroom including shower and bathtub too. 3D printing the walls is just the beginning of the potential. And tearing down and systematically sorting and recycling all individual parts of a house at the other end of the lifecycle.
We should fund a whole university focused on this technological area as a mega project to solve housing once and for all through maximum automation. Making housing free and a universal right for everyone should be the goal.
This is a ridiculous comment from someone who prints too many Magic the Gathering characters.
This technology has been typical tech bullshit from day one. Wood framed houses are cheaper, stronger, and can be repaired or changed in the future. It starts with the assumption that the building costs are the limitation to affordable housing. Wrong.
Have a robot dig foundations? You mean like this?
The biggest fans of 3D printed houses have no idea how houses are built. A small crew can frame an entire house in the time it takes just to setup the 3D printer gantry.
Do you mean your own ridiculous comment? And what do you mean printing Magic the gathering characters, do you mean color printing the little card pictures in large? Or do you confuse this with 3D printing characters for tabletop strategy games like Warhammer 40k? I'm just going to assume you're some kind of confused space ork.
Sure, robots are totally bullshit. They never have had any drastic effect how we live and work and if they did, it would surely stop at this specific point and go no further!
Yes, exactly like that! The advances I spoke of make it possible to control even hydraulic robot arms using software and computer vision. It's all very technical though.
And they already can switch end effectors and are mobile and can drive around!!! You could in fact build a 3D house printing robot exactly like that and it would take very little setup time. Or have a small group of them work together, day and night digging, printing and building homes.
that's exactly how all house foundations have been built for 100 years. Visit a construction site, learn something.
Here's a prefab housing complex from THE FUTURE...
That's from 1967. They now cost $1.7M each.