Students Break Architectural Design Barriers Using 3D Printing Robots at Bartlett School of Architecture’s RC4

RAPID

Share this Article

Bartlett School of Architecture 1In London, Bartlett School of Architecture’s RC4 offers masters-level courses, and is composed of a research cluster which is taking on the challenges of architectural design in 3D printing through the use of 3D printing industrial robots. Their goal is to turn these design challenges into opportunities — and to incorporate them into their designs.

While fine-tuned design and intricate detail lie at the center of much architecture, that often presents a challenge in digital design and fabrication. While it seems practically anything could be replicated today through the use of 3D printing, architecture is not always so readily cooperative. What was historically done through hands-on craftsmanship is still not so easily replicated by the machines we employ as tools to create and produce our designs.

For optimal efficiency and use of the 3D printing robots, the researchers at RC4 used a very direct computational approach by cutting out a number of steps such as employing mesh, contouring, or slicing — and getting straight to the matter of applying material. The models are designed specifically to organize the materials in space, depending on structure and logistics.

Team Filamentrics

Team Filamentrics

Student teams not only came up with unique projects but constructed their own robotic tools for the large-scale 3D printing projects, opening up the world of robotics and how they apply to 3D printing and design. The students worked in areas of:

  • Vectoral plastic extrusion
  • 3D printed sandstone
  • Ceramics
  • Clay
  • Concrete
Team Filamentrics - 2

Team Filamentrics

Research and design team Filamentrics (Zeeshan Ahmed, Justin Yichao Chen, Nan Jiang,Yiwei Wang) produced a design called SpaceWires. In an effort to break away from limitations of space and the traditional use of framing, they used robotic plastic extrusion to create large structures with fine detail. Due to the streamlined technology of the robot, they were able to break conventional rules by using a recursive plastic extrusion that allowed the robot to produce continuous material, and for it to solidify while in the air.

Team Microstrata (Maho Akita, Fame Ornruja Boonyasit, Syazwan Rusdi, Wonil Son) created Pixelstone, and chose to experiment with the powder-based sandstone to represent ideas for building with reinforced concrete in construction. Using a layer-based network of compression and tension, channels were left empty within the structure, and cast with aluminum for further tension and strength.

Microstrata 1

Microstrata Design

With the architectural research, design, production, and structures, the student teams broke all barriers with creating their own tools to take on significant challenges, and to build structures that would appear to defy space and gravity.

Discuss these unique structural designs with us in the Students Break Architectural Barriers forum at 3DPB.com.

Microstrata 2

Check out a video of team Microstrata’s project process:

Share this Article


Recent News

3D Printing Financials: Velo3D Sees Better Q1 2024 After Difficult Last Quarter

Aerospace OEM Invests $9.1M in Michigan for Metal 3D Printing and More



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Wisconsin’s Evology Adds Digital Sheet Forming to Service Roster

Evology, a service bureau based in Wisconsin and specializing in serving strategic sectors like aerospace and defense, has added digital sheet forming (DSF) to its repertoire of manufacturing capabilities. Evology...

Boring Company Alum Score $9M for Advanced Composites Manufacturing

Layup Parts, a Huntington Beach, CA-based startup specializing in on-demand manufacturing of parts made from composites, has received $9 million in its latest financing round. Founders Fund, the VC firm...

Featured

Industrial Giant Ingersoll Rand Leads $19M Round Backing Inkbit’s AI-Driven 3D Printing

Inkbit, the Massachusetts-based original equipment manufacturer (OEM) of multi-material, AI-integrated 3D printers, has closed a $19 million financing round. Ingersoll Rand, a US giant in the industrial equipment sector, led...

3YOURMIND & Nigerian Oilfield Services Firm RusselSmith Team Up on 3D Printed Part Inventory

3YOURMIND, the German and U.S. software services provider specializing in digital inventory platforms for additive manufacturing (AM), has partnered with Nigerian oilfield services firm RusselSmith to digitize spare part files...