What if construction materials could be put together and taken apart as easily as LEGO bricks? Such reconfigurable masonry would be disassembled at the end of a building’s lifetime and reassembled ...
This is a completely new chapter for construction and manufacturing. Printing underwater fundamentally changes how we ...
Kamal Khayat, seen here with a 3D printer in Missouri S&T University’s Advanced Materials Characterization Laboratory, leads a team that won a $1.4-million grant from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ...
Australian researchers have recently developed the world’s first underwater 3D concrete printing system which ...
Taking a cue from the structural complexity of trees and bones, engineers have created a way to 3D-print two types of steel in the same circular layer using two welding machines. The resulting ...
High-speed 3D printing has just gotten a lot faster. Researchers from Tsinghua University in China have developed a new high-speed printing technology capable of creating complex millimeter-scale ...
Harvard researchers have developed a 3D-printing method that could make it easier to build soft robots designed to bend, ...
Rice University researchers have discovered a way to employ 3D printing to create sustainable wood structures, providing a more environmentally friendly option to conventional manufacturing processes.
Engineers developed a new kind of reconfigurable masonry made from 3D-printed, recycled glass. The bricks could be reused many times over in building facades and internal walls. What if construction ...