3D printing started out with tiny plastic structures, and over time it has moved on to larger, more complex, and more solid things, from duck prosthetics to airplane engine parts. Will the next step be infrastructure?
A company named MX3D intends to do just that, with the help of Dutch designer Joris Laaram and Autodesk (providing the software to make this happen). The goal is to use robots to 3D-print a steel bridge over a canal in Amsterdam, basically creating the bridge out of thin-air, like in the rendering above.
Particularly challenging is that the robots will be printing their own supporting structures, so any early mistake or miscalculation will be fatal to the project.
"I strongly believe in the future of digital production and local production, in "the new craft". This bridge will show how 3D printing finally enters the world of large-scale, functional objects and sustainable materials while allowing unprecedented freedom of form," said Joris Laarman, the designer of the bridge. "The symbolism of the bridge is a beautiful metaphor to connect the technology of the future with the old city, in a way that brings out the best of both worlds."
Perhaps self-printing, self-healing infrastructure is the answer to its crumbling all the time.
(Score: 2) by urza9814 on Thursday June 18 2015, @01:20PM
If it's cheap enough, it doesn't have to last so long. Just have a robot that melts the whole damn thing down and rebuilds it every year. Virtually no labor costs, virtually no materials costs after you build the first iteration...the rebuilds would require nothing but energy. A hell of a lot of energy, but that's still probably a lot cheaper than hiring a whole construction crew.
And if it breaks, the robot can melt down the cars at the bottom of the canal for more steel to make the next one stronger! In fact, don't even build the first iteration, just program it into Google Maps. And have a robot which roams the canals searching for the resulting wreckage to build bridges out of. Hope someone loses a shipping container down there -- jackpot! :)