That will be great when you just want to install a doorbell
Hockey-Gym on

These_Ad_7966 on
I don’t question how strong they are. I question how pricey it is to build. They were supposed to be cheaper than traditional. Are they yet?
D-Rich-88 on

froggertthewise on
It’s just concrete, no stronger than any other concrete wall
StoryTimeJr on
Video takes a real interesting turn when Shrek starts shitting all over the houses.
Bombshellings on
That Shrek injector came out of fucking nowhere
Dankestmemelord on
The seams between layers will be a bitch to dust.
PM_ME_ROMAN_NUDES on

flow_yracs_gib_a on
People in the comment acting like houses around the world outsides of the USA aren’t made of cardboard and wood but out of bricks, stones, concretes, etc and we don’t have a problem adding rooms, fixing electricity or plombing etc… the problem isn’t how hard the wall is really, it’s more about the shape and structural integrity overall but people act like a wall made of sturdier elements than cardboard is “unbreakable” and you can’t fix your house down the road lmao
dimadomelachimola on
Ahhh yes, the strongest test against natural forces: the hammer.
Dildo_Schwagg1ns on
But it can’t shift unlike bricks or timber when the water table drops over summer. . .
It shall be very interesting to see how it plays out.
pimp_named_sweetmeat on
Who thought that 6 inches of pure concrete was going to be weak?
I just think the walls look stupid.
AuraMaster7 on
Strong against a hammer, sure. But it’s still concrete: without rebar it’s only strong in compression, not in tension. Can’t build anything like this in hurricane or tornado regions, or even really anywhere that gets strong storms at all, it would tear apart like putty.
NerobyrneAnderson on
Man I love this so much.
copsincars on
All the dust gathering in the crevices. Hell yeah.
Faskwodi on
Why Shrek though?
Cookieopressor on
Every time I see stuff like this showing off how strong it is by smacking it with a hammer…. that’s not what houses are dealing with. The real challenge is longtime weight. The forces in play there require a completely different approach than impact absorption
B1ueRogue on
What about the crevices..won’t that harbour dust dirst and bacteria?
ddkAh1 on
Where is the steel to reinforce the concrete and to make it durable?
TheCommonKoala on
The 3d-printed suburban dystopia no one asked for.
TheLordLongshaft on
This 100% is the future of house building
bezelbubba on
Query – how do these things perform in earthquake zones? Don’t you have to reinforce the walls with something like rebar or wire mesh? How is that 3D printed?
geebeem92 on

Shadeyx10 on
Why you got my mans Shrek just cheeked out like that…
TrixieBastard on
Sure, but I bet it cracks if there’s an earthquake
urabouy on
Yeah right, now bring that to south America with Cat5 systems
silentwanderer10 on
Did Shrek go to Taco Bell?
Hot-Comfort8839 on
The problem with them isn’t strength- it’s that they use 5x as much concrete, and as a result are 2-3x more expensive to build.
Oddbeme4u on
Being “3d printed” doesnt make it weaker or stronger. Its what the material is. You could 3d print in pooh
31 Comments
Wait until you want to remodel.
Can’t wait to see those videos.
That will be great when you just want to install a doorbell

I don’t question how strong they are. I question how pricey it is to build. They were supposed to be cheaper than traditional. Are they yet?

It’s just concrete, no stronger than any other concrete wall
Video takes a real interesting turn when Shrek starts shitting all over the houses.
That Shrek injector came out of fucking nowhere
The seams between layers will be a bitch to dust.

People in the comment acting like houses around the world outsides of the USA aren’t made of cardboard and wood but out of bricks, stones, concretes, etc and we don’t have a problem adding rooms, fixing electricity or plombing etc… the problem isn’t how hard the wall is really, it’s more about the shape and structural integrity overall but people act like a wall made of sturdier elements than cardboard is “unbreakable” and you can’t fix your house down the road lmao
Ahhh yes, the strongest test against natural forces: the hammer.
But it can’t shift unlike bricks or timber when the water table drops over summer. . .
It shall be very interesting to see how it plays out.
Who thought that 6 inches of pure concrete was going to be weak?
I just think the walls look stupid.
Strong against a hammer, sure. But it’s still concrete: without rebar it’s only strong in compression, not in tension. Can’t build anything like this in hurricane or tornado regions, or even really anywhere that gets strong storms at all, it would tear apart like putty.
Man I love this so much.
All the dust gathering in the crevices. Hell yeah.
Why Shrek though?
Every time I see stuff like this showing off how strong it is by smacking it with a hammer…. that’s not what houses are dealing with. The real challenge is longtime weight. The forces in play there require a completely different approach than impact absorption
What about the crevices..won’t that harbour dust dirst and bacteria?
Where is the steel to reinforce the concrete and to make it durable?
The 3d-printed suburban dystopia no one asked for.
This 100% is the future of house building
Query – how do these things perform in earthquake zones? Don’t you have to reinforce the walls with something like rebar or wire mesh? How is that 3D printed?

Why you got my mans Shrek just cheeked out like that…
Sure, but I bet it cracks if there’s an earthquake
Yeah right, now bring that to south America with Cat5 systems
Did Shrek go to Taco Bell?
The problem with them isn’t strength- it’s that they use 5x as much concrete, and as a result are 2-3x more expensive to build.
Being “3d printed” doesnt make it weaker or stronger. Its what the material is. You could 3d print in pooh