The UN is testing a 3D printer it says can build small modular homes, with the smallest single-room units costing just $1,000.
The UN is testing a 3D printer it says can build small modular homes, with the smallest single-room units costing just $1,000.

Wasp-inspired setup 3D-prints complete homes for $1,000

If ever there was an industry that could do with some technological overhaul - its housing. 3D Printing threatens to do the job, and seems to have the right tools, but never takes off - will this be the one that does?
At $1,000 per module they offer solutions to homelessness in western countries.
The modern housing crisis isn't a consequence of construction labor shortages or even construction labor costs. The primary hindrance to affordable housing is proximate real estate available for development.
Unless you can find a way to print more soil or to automate the pipping and road infrastructure that connects units, these tools will mostly benefit developers in the position to speculate on real estate bought decades in advance of new municipal infrastructure.
Where do you put the $1000 unit once you've built it? On a $300k lot?
I mean, where I live, there's definitely a construction labour bottleneck.
In many cities (thinking of Toledo OH) you can snag free lots.
They are zoned for single family houses only, which would cost $100k-200k to build, with a market value of maybe $50k
And nobody wants to change the zoning to allow 3d printed shanty towns.
The people saying this know nothing about construction or what innovations are needed. Humans have been building housing for thousands of years and we have learned a lot over that time. Anyone asking for a technological overhaul generally doesn't even know what we have learned and so is just going to make mistakes (sometimes deadly - there are many ways a house can kill) that someone in the industry would avoid. Generally they come up with something that costs more while being worse because they have no idea where the real problems are and so didn't optimize it.
I mean, there's lots of ways construction has changed already just in the last 20 years.
the people making way too much money in an industry--in this case, banks--will fight tooth and nail to prevent any kind of innovation that offers any alternative to them not making way too much money
From what I've ready, the concrete recipe is the hard part.
Yup, it needs to dry fast enough for the next layer, but not so fast it makes a clog, and it needs to flow in just the right way you can predictably extrude a layer on. And be cheap-ish.
Of course, you still have to add a lot of non-structural components, like the other user said, and if it needs to take significant loads you also need to add reinforcement somehow, since concrete is weak under tension.