Pearl Home Certification: Leading the Way to High Performance
CategoriesSustainable News Zero Energy Homes

Pearl Home Certification: Leading the Way to High Performance

A Platinum-level Pearl Certification renovation in Long Island, NY, prioritized both comfort and cost savings. The homeowners installed heat pumps, ENERGY STAR certified windows and doors, advanced cellulose-dense insulation, as well as solar panels. Smart home technology helps them manage energy and monitor savings

Tracking home improvements

The journey towards a more sustainable, comfortable, and valuable home can be long and complex. In his renovations, Woodcock said he primarily takes advantage of Pearl Points, a scoring system designed to help homeowners recognize and track high-performing assets and potential improvements. “The scoring system is sort of addictive,” Patrick says. “By that, I mean it’s like the way you want to reach the next level in a video game.”

Pearl’s multiple certification levels present your home’s overall performance, Silver, Gold, and Platinum. Plus, it deep-dives into specific categories of assets:

  • Building Shell, including insulation
  • Heating & Cooling systems
  • Baseload appliance energy use
  • Home Management, like smart thermostats and dashboards
  • Solar, EV & Energy Storage

A home that doesn’t reach Pearl Silver (yet!) can qualify for Pearl Asset Certification, highlighting one or more high-performing features: high-performance windows and doors, heat pumps, ENERGY STAR appliances, etc. Assets that interact more with your local climate will earn more points. For instance, a high-efficiency air conditioner will be worth more points in Phoenix than in the Midwest.

This helps identify the most impactful home upgrades, from temperature and humidity control to reducing energy bills and resilience in the face of climate change, including well-being issues like indoor air quality. These “hidden” systems have no curb appeal but do represent valuable, long-lasting home investments.

The Green Door app will recommend priority tasks and update your plan as you bring assets online, earning Pearl Points toward higher home certification. Maintenance reminders help you ensure your investments continue to save on your energy bill and retain their value. Finally, the app stores the documentation and warranties on upgraded systems.

To achieve Gold-level Pearl Certification, this renovation in Phoenix included solar panels, AeroSealing, an EV charger, and ENERGY STAR certified appliances.

Contractor connection

Jan Green, a realtor and certified eco-broker, transformed her 1979 dilapidated Phoenix home, purchased in 2015, into a net-zero, energy-efficient residence, earning a Pearl Gold Certification. “A lot of people probably don’t know this—I certainly didn’t—but if the contractor who does your energy audit is also a certified contractor, with the capabilities to handle whatever fixes or replacements the audit revealed, it’s fairly standard practice for them to waive the cost of the energy audit as long as you contract with them for services,” said Green.

Homeowners can access Pearl’s network of contractors through the Green Door app. Importantly, any work done by a Pearl Contractor is automatically Pearl Certified upon successful completion. This ensures that the improvements contribute towards the home’s certification and overall value.

Green began with an energy audit, and then step-by-step upgraded her home with efficiency renovations: air sealing, LED lighting, energy-efficient appliances, and solar panels. She was able to offset some costs with a 26% federal tax credit and state incentives. Her approach aligns with the Inflation Reduction Act’s (IRA) incentives for high-performing home improvements. Homeowners can determine which specific funds are available for different upgrades utilizing Pearl’s IRA Rebates Calculator.

Looking to sell?

Pearl hosts a nationwide network of real estate agents who are trained to identify and certify high-performing home features. They can then leverage the marketing materials provided with Pearl Certification to highlight a home’s high-performance qualities and capitalize on their added value.

More and more new homes include high-performing features. And as more cities adopt stricter energy codes, this is where the market is headed. An eco-savvy real estate agent can ensure you get the most value for your efficiency renovations by optimizing the green fields in MLS databases and filling out the Appraisal Institute’s Green and Energy Efficient Addendum. They know how to market individual energy efficiency, home automation, and solar features, as well as connect whole-home performance to value and comfort.

Home certification is a gateway to a higher standard of living and a testament to the value of sustainability investments in our homes. In an evolving real estate market, Pearl Certification recognizes what’s already working and helps unlock the full potential of our homes to create a better, greener future.

Reference

The future of construction: building with CO2
CategoriesSustainable News

The future of construction: building with CO2

Spotted: The global carbon capture and storage (CCS) market has increased significantly in recent years, and is projected to continue growing as the world looks for more ways to decarbonise. Often though, these solutions focus on storage underground, offering no commercial value. Paebbl’s technology, by contrast, turns carbon dioxide into a useful building material. 

Paebbl took the inspiration for its technology directly from nature. Carbon dioxide mineralisation, the process by which CO2 solidifies and turns into stone, is naturally occurring, but takes centuries to complete. Paebbl has found a non-energy-intensive way to accelerate mineralisation to make it over one million times faster, taking just 60 minutes.  

The company takes CO2 captured from the air or directly from polluting industrial sites and combines it with abundantly available silicate rocks to produce a carbon-negative raw material. 

This end product can be used as a filler in construction, as a replacement for parts of a concrete mix, and as paper, among other purposes. Unlike many methods of carbon storage or carbon-negative materials, the company also states that its material can be competitively priced.

Paebbl recently commissioned a 500-litre batch production unit, called Obelix, which has enabled the company to boost production capacity by 100 times in just half a year. With Obelix, Paebbl can create 100 tonnes of sustainable construction materials every year. The company expects to start shipping samples early 2024.

It’s not just the construction industry that’s using carbon to create new materials – Springwise has also spotted innovators turning it into chemicals and E-jet fuels.

Written By: Matilda Cox

Reference

Foam for the future: bio-polyurethane for cars and construction
CategoriesSustainable News

Foam for the future: bio-polyurethane for cars and construction

Spotted: Polyurethane is one of the main ingredients in insulating foam and industrial sealants and adhesives, and thanks to steady expansion of the construction and automotive industries, it is a rapidly growing market. Polyols are the chemical building blocks of those materials. Biopolyols are made from vegetable oils and are increasingly sought after for use in renewably produced and sustainable polyurethanes. 

The foam made from polyurethane can be rigid or flexible, with rigid foams used for insulation in construction, and flexible foams used in furniture and vehicle interiors. If alternatives to petroleum-based polyols can be produced at scale, industrial reliance on fossil fuel for this common polymer could be significantly decreased.  

Cypriot startup Ecorbio found a way to do this and more, with its patent-pending Crudyol project. Using biomass waste streams, the company produces biopolyols. Not only does the use of organic waste reduce global consumption of virgin feedstocks, but it also decreases pressure on arable land to produce crops for industry rather than food.  

The company works with a range of organisations in a variety of industries to chemically upcycle their biomass waste. As well as adhesives and foams, Ecorbio also produces customised products such as nozzles and gaskets. The biopolyurethane can be cast, making it an ideal replacement for hard-wearing, strong plastics. Ecorbio is currently working to bring Crudyol to market.  

Replacing plastic with sustainable alternatives and dealing with the mountains of waste that have already been created are global challenges being approached by innovators in multitudes of ways. Innovations showcased in Springwise’s library include using fungi to produce new packaging options and turning invasive plants into biodegradable plastics.

Written By: Keely Khoury

Reference

Philippe Block on Sustainable Construction: “Building Technique Is More Important Than Materials”
CategoriesArchitecture

Philippe Block on Sustainable Construction: “Building Technique Is More Important Than Materials”

The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.  

There is a quality one finds in people who really believe in what they do. It is not excitement in the voice or a twinkle in the eye. No, it is simply the fact that they are eager to explain what they do as clearly as they can. With this type, there is no space for any sort of conversational filler. Time is of the essence, and at the end of the discussion, they want to make sure, above all, that you “got” it, that you grasped their message.

The type I am thinking of is the opposite of the dissimulating salesperson who speaks with an agenda in mind. Ironically, of course, a person who believes in what they do is far more convincing than any salesperson.

In any case, this was my experience speaking with Philippe Block, a structural design researcher at ETH Zurich who is best known for his commitment to “strength through geometry,” or the idea that the mass of buildings — and with it their embodied carbon footprints — could be greatly reduced if architects were more thoughtful about load distribution. Instead of beams and flat floor plates, Block envisions a future of vaults and curves. With the right shapes, he argues, we could create high-rise buildings with far less concrete and, in many cases, almost no steel reinforcements whatsoever. And like the Gothic cathedrals he loves, these structures would stand for centuries, persisting through hurricanes, earthquakes and floods.

The fan-vaulted stone ceiling of King’s College chapel at the University of Cambridge, UK: fully unreinforced, standing over five centuries, and proportionally as thin as an eggshell. Photo by J. Kurt Schmidt. Used with permission from Block Research Group.

Reducing the amount of concrete used in construction would have a major impact on climate change. It is estimated that 8% of global carbon emissions are caused by the manufacture of cement, the binding agent in concrete.

Block, it must be noted, is no longer simply a researcher. He recently launched a company called VAULTED AG which produces customizable modular floor plates made from unreinforced concrete. The plates, of course, use the most sustainable concrete available on the market. But the most important aspect of them is not what they are made from, it is their shape. Due to the use of vaulting, these floor plates use 60% less concrete and 80% less steel than the standard floor plates used in the industry.

Yet they are just as strong, and can easily be used in the construction of high-density, high-rise buildings, meeting a practical need in a world with a population projected to grow by over 2 billion in the next thirty years. Geometry, Block explained, is not just about beautiful shells, opera houses and stadiums. It isn’t just for show.

VAULTED AG commercialises a low-carbon, fully circular prefab vaulted floor, called the Rippmann Floor System (RFS), that reduces the global warming potential (GWP) compared to a flat slab in reinforced concrete by at least two-thirds. Here, workers install a Rippmann floor plate in a 10 story project in Zug, Switzerland. Photo by Gabriele Mattei, used with permission by VAULTED AG.

When I spoke to Block over Zoom, he was eager to get down to the nuts and bolts of the discussion, which ended up lasting over an hour. The questions I had prepared ended up being irrelevant, as his slideshow presentation covered all that I wanted to ask and more. It never occurred to Block that I might be interested in talking about his background or personal life. From the jump, our conversation was all about proving his thesis that geometry, or building technique, is more important than materials when it comes to sustainable construction. This, he explained, is the concept behind VAULTED AG’s revolutionary floor plates. And if this principle were widely applied, it could change the future of construction forever. 

“When speaking of sustainability, so many people, in a very un-nuanced and simplistic way, talk about materials only, right?” he said, about a minute into the conversation. “Wood is good, concrete is bad. That is an absolute absurdity. It is not just about material, it’s also about how much you need, which is where structural design and optimization comes in, and then, increasingly important, the extending of resources or entire components past the first life of a building — to keep things in the loop in a circular construction economy.” 

The three main levers that contribute to the environmental impact of a building or construction, focusing on embodied emissions and resources. Graphic prepared by Catherine De Wolf & Corentin Fivet. Used with permission from Block Research Group.

Here Block pulled up a graphic showing how he calculates the environmental impact over the lifespan of a building. He emphasized that his goal was not only to lower the mass of buildings, reducing the amount of carbon, but also to use forms of concrete that are recyclable, and that can be reused once a building has been demolished. Concrete used correctly, he explained, is just as sustainable as wood, especially if one takes into account the lifespan of the building and the ability for unreinforced concrete to be reused and repurposed.

At this point, Block moved to a slide of the famous fan vaulting over the nave of King’s College Chapel at the University of Cambridge, England. This structure, he explained, has stood for over 500 years. More impressive than this, the stone vaults of this structure are simply “masonry systems… just pieces of stone held together in compression. They stand because they have a good geometry while being proportionally as thin as an eggshell.”

The Armadillo Vault, shown at the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale: 399 pieces of cut stone, held together through geometry, without mortar, glue or reinforcement, using the same principles as Gothic Cathedrals and demonstrating the beauty of strength through geometry. Photo by Iwan Baan. Used with permission from Block Research Group.

Block then opened his next slide, an installation he and his team created for the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale. “What you are looking at are 399 pieces of cut stone that are held together because of their geometry, no glue, no mortar, no reinforcement, fully dry assembled,” he explained. “So the same principles as to why the cathedrals are standing make this possible.” What struck me about this installation was just how thin the shell was. With the right geometry, a lot can be done with a small amount of materials.

Concrete, he explained, essentially behaves like stone once it is cast, so masonry principles apply to concrete construction. However, most modern buildings require massive amounts of steel-reinforced concrete because the structure is not assembled according to intelligent masonry principles. The key is to “align the structure to where the compressive forces naturally want to be,” unlike a “typical beam,” which does not offload the weight in any kind of strategic way, but simply braces the structure.

Concrete is an artificial stone, and like stone, it does not want to be a straight beam, it wants to be a masonry arch. A rib-stiffened, arched floor with tension ties uses up to 70% less concrete and 90% less steel compared to a flat slab in reinforced concrete for the same structural requirements. Graphic prepared by Block Research Group, ETH Zurich. Used with permission.

These are the principles that underlie Block’s vaulted floors, called the Rippmann Floor System or simply RFS. Aesthetically, I told Block, I really appreciated how these floors looked once installed, especially from underneath, where they can be installed to appear as beautiful vaulted ceilings. In the future, I proposed, perhaps flat roofs and ceilings will be associated with the 20th century, while geometrically informed construction will be considered a more contemporary building practice.

Block agreed, adding that there is something about these spaces that, like Gothic cathedrals, “feel good” to the visitor. One can tell that the materials are “happy,” that they are in an arrangement that “makes sense.” However, he added, he did not want to really push this point too hard. One could hang a simple flat suspended ceiling, concealing the expressive elements under thin shells. Architects who want to work with flat ceilings are still free to do so with this new system. Plates are fully customizable and easy to dry assemble on site. They are just as easy to work with as traditional floor systems; they just use drastically less material, and have a much smaller carbon footprint.

The CreaTower project in Zug, Switzerland, designed by Gigon+Guyer Architects, introduces the Rippman Floor System in a 10-story office tower. In the interior view, note the beautiful ribbed detailing on the ceiling, which makes structural elements of the flooring system visible. PONNIE images. Used with permission from Gigon+Guyer

The Rippmann Floor system is already being employed in commerical projects. In Zug, Switzerland, Gigon+Guyer is using the system for their CreaTower project, which includes a 10 story, 40 meter office tower.

I left my conversation with Block with a renewed sense of optimism about the future of architecture. Beautiful, powerful buildings need not be accompanied by a guilty conscience. With the right kind of ingenuity, we can have dense urban construction without catastrophic waste. Sustainability does not mean thinking smaller — just thinking differently. And maybe lighter…

Cover image: An early, sand-3D-printed prototype of the discrete masonry floor, which was further developed into the Rippmann Floor System. Used with permission from Block Research Group. 


The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.  

Reference

A digital field factory speeds up the construction of solar farms
CategoriesSustainable News

A digital field factory speeds up the construction of solar farms

Spotted: As the global community seeks ways to scale solutions as part of the commitment to net-zero emissions by 2050, experts agree that terawatts of renewable energy are needed. Scaling solar is the mission of California-based company Terabase Energy. With more than 50 terawatts of solar energy needed as quickly as possible in order to achieve world decarbonisation goals, the company recently introduced the world’s first automated field factory for solar farm production. 

Terabase works as the lead construction partner for utility-scale solar plant projects, providing everything from performance modelling and terrain mapping, to in-the-field manufacturing and grid-friendly plant management technologies. The new factories, called Terafab, use robotics-assisted construction, IoT-connected (Internet of Things) sites, and round-the-clock capability. 

By using a digital twin of the solar plant location, Terabase’s systems help developers make the most of limited resources. The Terabase platform can reduce the time engineers need to spend on site by up to 40 times, and its simulation ability helps plant managers track and predict voltage outputs for multiple years.  

The Terafab factories greatly reduce safety risks to human workers by eliminating the need for them to lift and carry heavy panels in harsh weather conditions. The automated aspect means that the construction of a plant can run continuously, thereby reducing the overall time and cost of development.  

Terabase opened its Terafab manufacturing facility – a “factory to make factories” – in Woodland, California earlier this year. The company also recently raised $25 million (around €22.3 million) to support its expansion, and has several commercial projects lined up later in the year that will use Terafab for their construction needs.  

Other innovations from Springwise’s archive that showcase developments in the photovoltaics field include a fully circular and open-source solar cell design and solar-powered cooling sheds for communities without access to steady refrigeration.

Written By: Keely Khoury

Reference

Construction blocks made from sugarcane 
CategoriesSustainable News

Construction blocks made from sugarcane 

Spotted: Sugarcane is the world’s most produced crop as of 2021 and is grown mostly for use as sugar and ethanol. Bagasse is the waste product left behind after the sugarcane is crushed to harvest the juice. Some of the leftover material is used for biofuel, but much is left to go to waste. Many of the world’s developing countries are key sugarcane producers, so finding a way to turn the bagasse waste into a valuable new product would provide significant support in further developing local economies. 

A collaborative project based in the University of East London has brought together researchers, commercial partners, sustainability experts, and architects to create Sugarcrete, a concrete brick replacement. According to the team, if only 30 per cent of the world’s bagasse waste was used for Sugarcrete production, the global brick industry could be completely replaced. 

Sugarcrete bricks are ultra-low carbon and are made by mixing bagasse with mineral binders. A fast-growing crop, sugarcane is an extremely efficient carbon sink. When combined with the low-emission manufacturing process, the final product becomes a particularly sustainable building option. 

The polyhedral bricks are designed to lock together to create strength without the need for additional supplies. Square slabs of the bricks are held together with only perimeter ties, and the team is working on strengthening the bricks further.  

The bricks meet industry standards for strength, durability, fire resistance, and thermal properties, and are four times lighter than traditional bricks with only 15 per cent of the carbon footprint. The team has made its research open source in order to support communities in developing new industries to replace the need to import expensive building supplies.  

The usefulness of sugarcane biowaste is being recognised by various innovators, who are transforming it into a range of new products. Springwise has also spotted electronics packaging and takeaway cups with a built-in lid.

Written By: Keely Khoury

Reference

Sustainable construction using technical wood
CategoriesSustainable News

Sustainable construction using technical wood

Spotted: Wood has been used in construction since time immemorial. However, more recently wood fell out of favour as a building material, both because it was seen as less safe and less sustainable. But the development of technical wood has demonstrated that it can not only be safer than other materials, but more sustainable as well. In Spain, startup Woodea is working to demystify the use of wood as a building material.

Woodea is combining wood, an ancient construction material, with modern production systems to deliver sustainable construction at a faster speed and comparable cost to traditional methods and materials. Its projects use technical wood, which is wood that has undergone high pressure and high temperature treatment to render it more durable. It also has better technical performance than materials such as concrete and steel.

Woodea has completed an initial funding round worth €1.4 million, with support from investors in a number of areas, including construction, engineering, and financial services. The capital will be used to undertake Woodea’s first projects, including construction of 250 wooden homes.

Architects and designers are increasingly rediscovering the advantages of building with wood. Springwise has also spotted a 100-metre tall, all-timber building being planned for Zurich, and a process that allows manufacturers to 3D print a wood composite.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

Reference

List of Best Steel Fabrication Companies & Steel Manufacturer in Islamabad and Rawalpindi
CategoriesTop Rated List Zarkon Group

List of Best Steel Fabrication Companies & Steel Manufacturer in Islamabad and Rawalpindi

Google’s Top Rated List of Best Steel Fabrication Companies & Steel Manufacturer in Islamabad and Rawalpindi Contact Numbers List with Rating & Reviews. Find Business Contact Numbers by Category for Steel Fabricators, Steel Manufacturer, Steel Framework, Aluminium Welder, Blacksmith, Construction, Fabrication Engineer, Iron Works, Mechanical Engineer, Metal Fabricator, Metal Finisher, Metal Workshop, Stainless Steel and Welder. Latest Updated October 2022.

List of Best Steel Fabrication Companies & Steel Manufacturer in Islamabad and Rawalpindi

Company NameRatingReviewsCategoryCityPhone NumberWebsiteLocation MapAddress
FF Steel Islamabad4.349ManufacturerIslamabad+92 51 111 888 999WebsiteDirectionsI-9/2 I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Islamabad Steel Re-Rolling Mills4.535Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 444 7999DirectionsStreet 10, I-9/2 I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Bajwa Metal Works4.833WelderRawalpindi+92 333 5227237WebsiteDirectionsbajwa St, near General Bus Stand, Pirwadhai, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46350, Pakistan
IQBAL & SONs steel works4.925Steel FrameworkRawalpindi+92 332 5511869WebsiteDirectionsShadman Town, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Al Rehman Fiberglass and Steel works521Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 333 5119539DirectionsSaidpur Road Shop # CA 168/1, Besides Shell Petrol Pump, Saidpur Rd, New Katarian Satellite Town, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Arslan Steel & Aluminium Works512Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 333 0427427WebsiteDirectionsBlock No. 38, Shop No. 3, I&T Centre, G-10/4 G 10/4 G-10, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
CNC Metal Cut511Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 321 5568112DirectionsShop#W572, Ratta Rd, near novelty plaza, Raja Bazar, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Pothohar Steel Industries Re-Rolling Mills4.410Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 336 5014357DirectionsPlot 7-8, Service Rd W, I-9-2, I-9, I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Rawal Steel Centre3.69Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 51 575 0656DirectionsShop A-90, City Saddar Rd, Ittehad Colony, Raja Bazar, Nanakpura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
AL Haj Asia Star Steel Company Private Limited 亚星钢铁4.58Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 228 6851DirectionsPlot#398, industrial zone, main، 3 Service Rd ( I 9 ), I 9/3 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Ramzan Steel Works4.98Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 345 5115002DirectionsRoad, Allama Iqbal Colony Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Bhatta steel engineering57Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 335 0550342DirectionsMain bhatta chowk Rawilpindi 1 Main bhatta chowk, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
MIZ Re Rolling Steel Mills4.97Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 443 2012WebsiteDirectionsPlot No 248، Street 6, Sector: I-9/2، I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Zain Steel Works56Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 301 5133419DirectionsStreet No.1, F-11/1 F-11, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Mughal steel fabrication & home decor4.76Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 346 4277539Directionsgulraz gat3، East Ridge, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Haider Steel And Aluminum Fabricators4.85ManufacturerIslamabad+92 51 280 8235DirectionsBlock 82 Street 55, G-9/4 G 9/4 G-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Steel store55Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 342 5504440WebsiteDirectionsopposite rohtas shadi haal st#2 waqar steel works, Friends Colony Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Modern Steel Mills4.34Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 444 8074Directions22 Service Rd West I-9, I-9/2 I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Haider Steel Works54Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 340 0238367DirectionsShop 1, Taj Market, Banni stop F13, Islamabad, 44000, Pakistan
High Precision Engineering-Porta Cabins-Prefab Offices-Insulated Sandwich Panel4.34Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 222 7715DirectionsGrand Trunk Rd, G 15/3 Tarnol, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 45211, Pakistan
Building Maintenance@Bashir Sons53Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 334 5111548WebsiteDirectionsFlat No. 1, Awan Plaza، G-7 Markaz G 7 Markaz Khadda market، Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Five Star Services3.73Metal FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 9440522WebsiteDirectionsRawalpindi, Islamabad, Punjab, Pakistan
Makkah Steel53Stainless SteelRawalpindi+92 51 555 2224WebsiteDirectionsUnnamed Road, Gawal Mandi, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Azeem Engineering52Metal FabricatorIslamabad+92 345 5403358DirectionsG-8/1 G 8/1 G-8, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Bismillah Ajmeri Steel Works42Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 331 5157382DirectionsBoring Rd, Mohalla Loharan, Pirwadhai, Pirwadhai, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Hamza Steel52Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsLine no 1, Momin Pura Mohan Pura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Golra Steel Works32Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsDhok Syedan Rd, Kamalabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Ideal Steel works52Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 332 9200560DirectionsG-15 Markaz G 15 Markaz G-15, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Ittehad Steel Works52Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsChaklala Rd, Glass Factory Chowk, Chah Sultan Qasimabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Kainat Steel Works52Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 303 5718417DirectionsCapital Enclave Avenue, Lohi Bher, Jinnah Garden, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Meharban Market2.52Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsMeharban Market, Dhamial Rd, Ashraf Colony, Shadman Town, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Al Hadeed Steel Art & Fabrication52Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 305 4008419WebsiteDirectionsPh.IV, Swan camp, Main Grand Trunk Rd, near Taxi Stand, opposite Behria, Islamabad, Punjab, Pakistan
Awan and Sons Steel Works52Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 321 5656736WebsiteDirectionsShop 55, 8/A Chaklala Road, Millat Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Ideal Steel Fabrication51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 345 5106227DirectionsGolra Rd, Station Mor, E-12, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44220, Pakistan
Gujrat Steel Fabrication31Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 5038955DirectionsSarfaraz Market, KRL Rd, Jahandad Town, Al-Noor Colony, Jehandad Town, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Quality Steel Fabricator Centre51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 51 442 6045DirectionsSK Plaza, IJ Principal Rd, Dhok Babu Irfan, Shamsabad, Dhoke Babu Irfan, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Usman Aluminium steel fabricator & glass center51Aluminum WelderRawalpindi+92 301 3005622DirectionsShop no 7 ch mehraban arcade, main High Ct Rd, Phase 3 Gulrez Housing Scheme, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Aslam Steel Works51BlacksmithIslamabad+92 300 5530028DirectionsI & T Center, Aslam Steel works Shop 7 Bashir plaza, G10/4, H 8/2 H-8, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Ali Steel and Aluminum Shop51Iron WorksRawalpindi+92 332 6185237DirectionsBahria Safari Valley Ali Block Bahria Safari Valley, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Gujranwala Welding41Metal FabricatorIslamabad+92 340 5336856DirectionsF-6/1 F 6/1 F-6, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Gulzar Steel Works11Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 331 7663000DirectionsAslam Market, Aabpara G 6/1 G-6, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Mashallah Welding Works11Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 302 5162697DirectionsMain Bazar Rd, Main Bazar, Dhoke Kala Khan, Shamsabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Usman Brothers Steel Works41Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 333 5174559DirectionsShakrial Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Al-Mehboob Steel Engineering Works51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 345 4194172DirectionsHigh Court Rd, Car Chowk, Gulrez, Phase 6 Gulrez Housing Scheme, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Afzal steel works51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 6144769DirectionsKhanna Rd, Khanna dak, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 45551, Pakistan
Madina Engineering & Steel Raak Makers & Cable Tray51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 301 5660990DirectionsUsman Pura, Gawalmandi Rd, Nanakpura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
New Kashmir Wasim Steel Workshop31Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 5204871DirectionsAdiala Rd, Khawaja Corporation Chowk, Lalazar, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Kashmir Steel Corporation51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 51 553 6095Directionsnew Mohan Pura scheme,off, City-Sadar Road, Nanakpura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Sadiq Steel Works51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 346 5159044DirectionsSaidpur Rd, Asghar Mall Chowk, Asghar Mall, Kartar Pura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Butt Stainless Steel Works51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 313 5226477DirectionsSammar Zar kalyal, Main Adyala Rd, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46100, Pakistan
Aqib Steel & Fiber Glass51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 5933251DirectionsMain golrha, 4 Service Rd W, F-11/1 F 11/1 F-11, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Al Mudassar Steel Works51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 312 7860294DirectionsNH 5, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Ittefaq steel art51Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsFateh ghang road sector f17 gate no 2 nogazi stop tarnol, Islamabad, Pakistan
Niazi Sign51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 301 5991113DirectionsPlot 211, Block 1, Wahid Plaza Near Volvo Company, G.T Road, Tarnol, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 45750, Pakistan
Awan Welding Service51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 5270362DirectionsRailway Scheme Rd, Railway Scheme Chaklala, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Rehmani Steel Works51WelderIslamabad+92 333 6751099DirectionsG-6/2 G 6/2 G-6, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Riz Engineering Services51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 333 5554497WebsiteDirectionsShop No 04,Link Road Sohan Highway Stop Sohan Highway Stop, Islamabad, 44000, Pakistan
Alpha Steels51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 611 1193WebsiteDirectionsPlot#59 Street 13, I-9/2 I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Bilal fiber and steel works51Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 308 8583946WebsiteDirectionsGirja Rd, near Masjid Ghulam haider, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
MS CORPORATION51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 6147893WebsiteDirectionsH-13, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Sarhad Steel Works51Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 332 5253651WebsiteDirections8, Islamabad, 44000, Pakistan
Lucky Steel Fabricator00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 333 5207824DirectionsShamsabad St, New Banian Mohalla, Shamsabad, Shamsabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Mohammadia Steel Fabrication00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsKuri Rd, Muzammil Town, Shakrial, Kuri Road Area, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Abbasi & Co Steel Fabrication00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 5080180DirectionsLehtrar Rd, Taramri, Tarlai Kalan, Taramri, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 45550, Pakistan
Capital Steel Fabricators00Construction andIslamabad+92 333 5280774DirectionsGolra railway station road Sector, G-13/2 Islamabad, 44000, Pakistan
Nasir Steel Works and Kitchen Equipments00Fabrication EngineerRawalpindi+92 340 1442776DirectionsUsman Pura, Near Nala Lai, City-Sadar Road, Nanakpura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Naveed steel works00Iron WorksRawalpindi+92 300 5368052DirectionsQuaid-e-Azam Colony Quaid e Azam Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Friends 1 Steel Fabricators00Mechanical EngineerRawalpindi+92 305 2103839Directions33.605612473322104,73.05682897567749, Rawalpindi, 46000, Pakistan
Zubair Trunk Shop00Metal FabricatorRawalpindi+92 316 5189800DirectionsMohammadabad Rd Mohammadabad, Westridge, Allahabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
RG Steel Fabricators00Metal FinisherIslamabad+92 322 6448887DirectionsF-11, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Qamar Steel Sheet Fabrication00Metal WorkshopRawalpindi+92 51 553 6695DirectionsRehman Building (Jang/News Head Office), Murree Rd, Marir Hasan, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Chaudhry Steel Fabricators00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsSagheer Market, St 40, F-10-4, F-10, F 10/4 F-10, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Naqeeb Steel Works00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 9106788DirectionsI & T Centre, Shop 3, Block 46, G-10 Markaz, G-10, G 10 Markaz G-10, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Sargodha Steel Decorators00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 344 5230587DirectionsI&T Centre, Shop 3, Block 115, St 30, G-9-1, G-9, G 9/1 G-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44090, Pakistan
Al Rehman Steel00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 347 7011011DirectionsService Lane, near Karal Police Station, H 8/2 H-8, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Shalimar Steel Fabricators00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsSaad Plaza, New Katarian Market, New Katarian, Satellite Town, New Katarian Satellite Town, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Insaf Steel Works00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 345 6000611DirectionsPakeeza Market, Plot E-2, Shop 4, St 1, I-8-4, I-8, I 8/4 I-8, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Al-Habib Steel & Welding Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 321 5004609DirectionsPeshawar Rd, Aliabad, Meharabad, Koh e Noor Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
M A Chuhan Steel Fabrication00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 333 5102625DirectionsShop # P-1624, A/5, near Asghar Mall Road, Block E Asghar Mall Scheme, Rawalpindi, Punjab 44000, Pakistan
Al-madina trader steel00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsStreet 22, G-11/1 G 11/1 G-11, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Adil steel works00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 5034939DirectionsMehmood Abad Pindora, Islamabad, Punjab, Pakistan
Friends fiberglass and steel work00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsStadium Rd, MPCHS Pindora, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Punjab 46300, Pakistan
Ahmed00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsDhoke Dalal Rd, Asghar Mall Scheme, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Mughal Steel and Aluminium00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 315 6288698DirectionsMain Grand Trunk Rd, Koh e Noor Colony, Wah Cantt, Rawalpindi, Islamabad Capital Territory 46000, Pakistan
Margalla Stell Rerolling Mills00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 443 2059DirectionsHead Office: Plot 240، Street 8, I-9، I 9/2 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Sikandar Steel Decoration00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsNew Katarian Satellite Town, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Punjab, Pakistan
Al Madina Steel And Fiberglass00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 317 5619035DirectionsJohad Rd, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Abdul Rehman Steel Works00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 308 4035517Directionsinside Gali, behind Total Petrol Pump, Benazir Chowk, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 45230, Pakistan
Wall Street Fabrication & Construction Chemicals00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 308 6526185DirectionsStreet 3, Westridge III Westridge 3, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46060, Pakistan
Yasir Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsMisrial Rd, Baraf Khana Chowk, Dhok Syedan, Allama Iqbal Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
All Atif steel works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 311 0385551DirectionsGawal Mandi, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Sitara Steel Cutting00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsCity-Sadar Road, Raja Bazar Ittehad Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Janjua Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 51 550 8567DirectionsChaudhry Gulab Khan Market, Bostan Khan Rd, Dhok Chaudhrian, Chaklala 3, Chaklala Housing Scheme 3, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Bashir Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 347 9374086DirectionsMisrial Rd, Baraf Khana Chowk, Dhok Syedan, Chamanabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Zafar Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 322 5118510DirectionsKoila Centre, Nishtar Rd, Saddar, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Adnan steel workers00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 336 5338133DirectionsPlot#504,main sector 4 road airport housing society, gulzaeqaid، Rawalpindi, Pakistan
hashmi steel work alipur Jabi islamabad00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 5260468DirectionsAlipur jabi Islamabad, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 46000, Pakistan
Ilyas Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 346 5376417DirectionsRd, Rajgan Market, Dhok Gangal, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
SKB Steel Works00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 300 5213861DirectionsFatehjang Rd, Tarnol, Benazir Chowk, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Ghausia Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 333 5696044DirectionsMisrial Rd, Niazi Town, Dhok Syedan, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
SAU Engineering (Pvt.) Ltd00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 51 540 2596DirectionsG-15, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Buner Steel Workshop00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsBenazir Chowk, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
good luck steel00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 333 5878102Directions19 Shalimar Rd, Block G Soan Gardens, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Hajveri Steel & Aluminium works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 4494354DirectionsHigh Court Rd H4F3+3X4 Car Chowk, Gulrez, Rawalpindi, 46000, Pakistan
Commercial Kitchen Engineering pirwadhai Rawalpindi00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 333 5577494DirectionsLohaargali, Pirwadhai, Rawalpindi, Punjab 92051, Pakistan
AK Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsPeshawar Rd JX9M+7F6 Purani Chowki, Naseerabad, Rawalpindi, 46500, Pakistan
HARIS STEEL WORKS00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 304 5573056DirectionsDahoke Ratta Pull, Ratta Amral Ratta Armal, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Khan Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsSajid Bukhari Rd, Peoples Colony, Allama Iqbal Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Sher E Rabbani Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 345 4923775DirectionsGrand Trunk Rd, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Data Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 345 5270242DirectionsMisrial Rd, Baraf Khana Chowk, Dhok Syedan, Chamanabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Eman Steel Trader00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsFatehjang Rd - GT Rd Link, Tarnol, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Gul Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsRoad, Morgah, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Sani Khan Safi Sarya Steel Dealer00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 301 5220027DirectionsIslamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
MNA - masternajafali.com00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsNanak Pura Nanakpura, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Akbar Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirections1 Adyala Rd, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Ghani Enterprises00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsG-15, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
S G Intrior decorator00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 310 5685220Directionsshop number 2, al Qamer market, Main High Ct Rd, Gulrez 3 Phase 3 Gulrez Housing Scheme, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
Lahore Steel00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 320 4310882DirectionsPlot No#2, Khudadad Mumtaz City Gate, Link Rd, opposite Agility Warehouse, near New Islamabad Airport, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Punjab 44000, Pakistan
Js steel00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 303 8185632Directionsback side, clock Tower, Save mart, Rawalpindi, Pakistan
Fazal Industries00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsI-9/3 Phase 6 Bahria Town, Islamabad, Punjab 44000, Pakistan
Saleh steel works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindiDirectionsGhouse Azam Rd, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Ahsan Steel Works00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 8057719Directionsno2, Tember market, main Bostan Khan Rd, near ma motor, Chaklala Housing Scheme 3, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan
ABDULLAH STEEL00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 334 5445265DirectionsShahpur stop, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46606, Pakistan
ICON solutions00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 310 2500507DirectionsC business junction, Phase 8 Bahria Town, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46221, Pakistan
New Khan Steel Works00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsFatehjang Rd - GT Rd Link, Tarnol, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Bilal Steel & Fabir Glass00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 321 5329668DirectionsShop No. 12, Adyala Road, Chungi No. 20, Benazir Market, Rawalpindi, 46000, Pakistan
ARHAM STEEL00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 345 9796862DirectionsPlot 259 St 8, I-9/3 I 9/3 I-9, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
Ghosia Fabrication Work Shop00Steel FabricatorIslamabadDirectionsKhan Bahadar, Awan Road, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Noshhi siteel weerk00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 347 6806930DirectionsPhase 7 Rawalpindi, Islamabad Capital Territory, Pakistan
Awan Steel & metal works00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 333 5058811WebsiteDirections
Steel Tech00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 321 5006432WebsiteDirectionsSt 3, main Street 1, I-10/3 I 10/3 I-10, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44000, Pakistan
PHAM ENTERPRISES (Pvt) Ltd00Steel FabricatorIslamabad+92 307 5727380WebsiteDirectionsOffice No #8 Bashir Market, Grand Trunk Rd, behind Hascol Pump, near G15, G-15, Islamabad, Islamabad Capital Territory 44150, Pakistan
M.J steel00Steel FabricatorRawalpindi+92 300 5047209WebsiteDirectionsDhoke Syedian Rd, Azam Colony, Rawalpindi, Punjab 46000, Pakistan

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Construction Is Underway on the First Multi-Story 3D-Printed House in the United States
CategoriesArchitecture

Construction Is Underway on the First Multi-Story 3D-Printed House in the United States

 How can architecture be a force for good in our ever-changing world? During Future Fest, we’re pose this question to some of the world’s best architects. We’re hosting daily virtual talks from September 12th to 30th, which are 100% free to attend.  Check out the full schedule!

Construction has began on the first two-story 3D-printed structure in the United States. Located in Houston, the 4000-square-foot home will soon become one of the world’s largest and tallest printed buildings, showcasing the rapidly expanding possibilities of 3D printing technology and mass customization in the field of architecture.

The project caps off a two-year collaborative effort between HANNAH, an experimental design firm and research studio based in Ithaca, PERI 3D, an international 3D construction printing provider, and CIVE, the leading engineering service and general contractor in Houston. The design uses a hybridized construction method that will combine printed concrete modules with wood framing, making it one of the first 3D printed to use wood and concrete in an integrative manner.

Spearheaded by Leslie Lok and Sasa Zivkovic, assistant professors at the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning at Cornell University and principals at HANNAH, the project began with the objective of developing a 3D printed construction system that could be scalable and applicable for multi-family housing the future — not an easy feat given the additional structural challenges when printing beyond a single story. As such, Lok explains that it was necessary to develop the design in relationship to the material and construction process.

“Every aspect of the project, from the overall spatial configuration to the scale architectural detailing — such as how we create shelving and openings — was informed by the unique fabrication logic of 3D printed concrete,” Lok said. “With the structural engineering expertise from CIVE and the extensive printing knowledge of PERI 3D, we were able to develop an approach to 3D print the second story.”

Once completed, the project will alternate between concrete modules and glazed wooden frames; rendering by HANNAH

Though a handful of 3D printed multi-story projects have been built abroad, mostly in Europe, HANNAH’s design stands out for its adaptation to the American construction culture of wood framing. Whereas the use of precast concrete components for floors and ceilings has long been a European norm, wood framing as a construction technique is much more prevalent in North America, though their integration in 3D printed construction has so far been limited. In response to this, HANNAH sought to create a design that would be more easily applicable to the U.S. market. The final result is a house that alternates between wood and printed concrete volumes, a strategy that combines the best of both materials, the pair explain.

“What is unique about our modular design is that the printed concrete and the wood framing work hand in hand and we use them where they’re best performing,” Zivkovic said. “It’s not about printing concrete everywhere because you could, but where it makes sense.”

Photos by Anthony Vu via HANNAH

In part, the project is showcasing the usefulness of 3D printing for the future construction industry. The modular 3D printer — a COBOD BOD2 gantry printer — takes only one day to set up, and the printing can run 24/7. Although a handful of people are still needed on the worksite to supervise the machine, the printer does virtually all the heavy lifting.

Achieving the right printing mixture for the concrete was one challenge that necessitated the help of other industry partners. The PERI 3D printing team worked with engineers at Quikrete, a manufacturer of packed concrete, to achieve improved printability for their new generation of printing mixture at the specific site in Houston. The team conducted test prints on site earlier this summer to dial in the various printing parameters.

Designing the 3D printed house was another demanding part of the project, since unlike (human) contractors, 3D printing machines don’t read architectural plans but lines of code. The architects at HANNAH used special software to manually design the path that the printing machine uses to pour one continuous line of concrete for the new house; a meticulous process known as the ‘toolpath’ that equally comprises structural and aesthetic considerations, leaving no room for error.

Far from letting this complex process limit their design, HANNAH used the printing toolpath as an opportunity to push the design possibilities of 3D-printed structures. The repeated use of incremental cantilevers within the concrete modules serves as an architectural motif that is both ornamental and functional. Paired with the distinct horizontal layers of printed concrete, HANNAH creates a bold stylistic statement about 3D printed architecture; hinting at the opportunities of new design language for printed projects.

More broadly, the project is offering a glimpse of a future where 3D printing could become a major force in the construction industry; where automated construction could address a variety of pressing issues, from alleviating workforce shortages to constructing affordable housing. Still, much work lies ahead. For this project, the team hope to use the project as a learning opportunity to streamline the construction process, as well as to optimize material usage and cost for 3D printing buildings — all necessary steps that need to be undertaken if 3D printed architecture is to attain newer heights.

 How can architecture be a force for good in our ever-changing world? During Future Fest, we’re pose this question to some of the world’s best architects. We’re hosting daily virtual talks from September 12th to 30th, which are 100% free to attend.  Check out the full schedule!

 

Reference

How Will Modular Construction Continue Changing Design?
CategoriesArchitecture

How Will Modular Construction Continue Changing Design?

Browse the Architizer Jobs Board and apply for architecture and design positions at some of the world’s best firms. Click here to sign up for our Jobs Newsletter. 

Modular construction isn’t a new concept in architecture; however, it wasn’t until the 20th century that the concept began gaining traction: pre-fabricate parts of buildings in factories how we build car parts and then assemble them onsite as if they were human-sized Lego bricks. Even still, until recently the term ‘modular construction’ brought to mind clunky concrete boxes and repetitive housing blocks.

Yet, now, as manufacturing technology in the architecture sector continues advancing and the environmental cost of construction is being evaluated more critically, modular design is becoming an increasingly attractive approach for architects and contractors. In fact, AMA Research reported that modular construction is set to grow by 14% between 2020 and 2024, and its seemingly limitless possibilities portend even greater growth for years to come. We’ve only scratched the surface of what is proving to be one of the most promising research fields in architectural design.

By shifting construction towards a manufacturing-style process, the modular design presents a host of unique advantages. The fabrication of materials inside the strictly controlled setting of a factory reduces the number of uncontrollable variables that might have otherwise caused delays or cost overruns. All the pre-fabrication work also means that the assembly phase itself is as streamlined as possible: the bulk of the work consists in stacking and bolting together the components of the building, reducing the inconveniences of construction — waste, noise and pollution from heavy-duty machinery — to a minimum.

Take for instance B100arcquitectos’ Science of Rehabilitation Faculty building at Don Bosco University in Soyapango, El Salvador. The project by the A+Award finalist firm offers us a glimpse of what the future of architecture might look like thanks to modular construction.

Annex Building Science of Rehabilitation Faculty Don Bosco University by B100arquitectos, Soyapango, El Salvador

The impact is apparent in the most striking feature of the building: the large, beautiful trees stooping over and surrounding the campus building, as if they had been purposely planted around it decades ago (and not the other way around!). This impressive architectural feat could only have been possible thanks to the flexibility of modular construction; the pre-fabricated cubic modules only had to be moved into place rather than built from the ground up. And though that presented its own logistical challenges, it spared the sacrifice of many trees, leaving over over 80% of the lot’s forestry untouched. The old trees now form an integral part of the architectural experience and give a sense of maturity to the building far beyond its one-year-old existence.

Aside from the aesthetic advantages, the modular construction was completed quickly and with little material waste. This allowed the firm to work on a tighter budget — the whole project ringing in at under a million dollars — allowing the University to invest more on what’s inside the classroom rather than on the classrooms themselves.


Are you interested in joining one of the most promising fields in architecture? Consider applying to a firm that specializes in modular construction.

Volumetric Building Companies (VBC) is a global leader in volumetric modular construction headquartered in Philadelphia, PA with locations across the United States and in Europe. The firm uses its precision-driven manufacturing capabilities and project-proven expertise to provide high quality, sustainably produced modular-designed buildings in less time across varied market sectors. VBC is currently looking to hire a Design Technology Manager, a Senior Project Designer / Senior Project Architect and a Senior Design Associate for their Somerville, MA offices.

Browse the Architizer Jobs Board and apply for architecture and design positions at some of the world’s best firms. Click here to sign up for our Jobs Newsletter. 

 

Reference