Published 08-10-2015

PRINTING HOUSES IN SWEDEN WITH ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING

30-07-2015

The 35-million-SEK project (entitled the +Project) is a joint effort between researchers and external partners to develop the technology to make full-scale 3D prints of cellulose-based material, using an additive printing method. It is not a matter of small prints – the objective of the +Project is to print houses.

While the impact of digitalisation on the manufacturing and construction industry is still in its infancy, a large project with based in Sliperiet at Umeå Arts Campus (part of Umeå University) is now setting the pace in the region's journey to the forefront of this field.

“There are rapid developments within the area of digital manufacturing in construction, with technology such as large scale cement 3D printers being developed. With our project, we hope to help put the region at the forefront of this innovation area. Digitalisation, and through it mass-customization, can provide incredibly exciting opportunities for the regional forest and construction industry, and create sustainable business opportunities based on our natural resources," says Linnéa Therese Dimitriou, Creative Director at Sliperiet.

One of the sub-goals of the project is to produce cellulose-based materials for full-scale 3D printing of everything from weather-stripping and doors, to walls and, in the end, complete houses. Sliperiet has, together with various collaborating partners, received SEK 17.6 million from EU Structural Funds in an interdisciplinary development project aimed at building a strong area of innovation and a regional cluster in digital manufacturing, sustainable building and 3D technology. In total, the collaborative project is worth SEK 35.3 million.

"The idea of the project is to develop a technology that can be used in reinforcing the manufacturing industry in the region. For Sliperiet, the project… is a part of the strategy of forming collaboration in an open and interdisciplinary innovative environment. Here, meetings and collaborations are created between various scientific areas and together with companies in the region," says Marlene Johansson, director of Sliperiet.

The target audiences for the +Project are small and medium-sized industries in the construction and wood sector, as well as creative markets such as architecture, design and IT. Entrepreneurs, creators and companies will, in collaboration with the university and research institutes, develop prototypes for products and services based on the regional infrastructure and raw materials – prototypes that can be commercialised by regional companies and entrepreneurs.

There are further plans to explore new circular models for business and production and to create a competence centre for sustainable building and administering. At the end of the project in 2018, a World Expo will be created in order to further cement the region in the lead of digital manufacturing and sustainable building.

At Umeå University, the following collaborating partners are involved: Umeå School of Architecture, Umeå School of Business and Economics, the Department of Informatics and the Department of Applied Physics and Electronics.

The project is also made up of the research institutes: the Interactive Institute (Swedish ICT) and SP Processum, as well as of companies such as Revenues, White Architects, and the Network for sustainable building and administering in cold climates. Umeå municipality and Region Västerbotten offer their support by co-funding the project.

RELATED NEWS

  1. Australia’s industries and productivity could be transformed by  ‘foundation models’, the technology underpinning the rise of generative artificial intelligence (AI) — and we can build sovereign capability in this technology — says a new report by Australia's national science agency, the CSIRO.  
    "...
  2. Now at full speed, Fortescue’s new electric excavator has dug a million tonnes at Fortescue’s Chichester operations in the Pilbara, WA, and the mining company says it’s a massive milestone in its decarbonisation plan.
    For the past three months, it had been running at partial capacity while the site...
  3. For the past month, the Australian Army has been part of Project Convergence, a US-led campaign of learning through persistent experimentation testing. Its mission is to develop networks, robotic and autonomous systems, air defence and strike-related systems.
    Project Convergence was designed to...