3D printed mud housing to debut at “Reality of Dream” event in Massa Lombarda, Italy.
Italian innovator Massimo Moretti inspires a creative new angle on future low cost housing construction.
The world’s largest Delta 3D printer can print nearly zero-cost housing out of mud
Italian innovator Massimo Moretti launched WASP with the goal to “create a means for affordable fabrication of homes, and provide these means to the locals in poverty stricken areas.” WASP’s affordable housing solution combines 3D printing with biomimicry, drawing inspiration from the mud dauber wasp that constructs its home from one of the world’s oldest building materials: mud. The choice of clay and mud inputs for the portable BigDelta was a conscious choice; although many 3D printers use cement, Moretti chose earth because of its low environmental footprint, local availability, and natural insulating benefits. Based on previous prototypes, the BigDelta will presumably build full-size houses using open-source software and a mixture of mud, clay, and plant fibers for reinforcement.
Related: Need a home? Now you can 3D print one—out of mud
WASP has come an impressively long way in a short span of time—they revealed their four-meter tall BigDelta prototype less than a year ago—especially considering that the company doesn’t receive any public financing. Their timing is also advantageous. According to their press release: “Building BigDelta is much more than a dream come true if we consider that, by 2030, international estimates foresee a rapid growth of adequate housing requirements for over 4 billion people living with yearly income below $3,000. The United Nations calculated that over the next 15 years there will be an average daily requirement of 100.000 new housing units to meet this demand.”
+ World’s Advanced Saving Project
Images via World’s Advanced Saving Project