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First Ever 3D-printed Hotel In Construction In Texas

3D printed hotel

El Cosmico, an established hotel and campsite on the outskirts of Marfa, is constructing 18 private dwellings and 43 additional hotel apartments, all of which will have 3D printers.

TakeAway Points:

  • El Cosmico, an existing hotel and campground on the outskirts of the city of Marfa, is building 43 new hotel units and 18 residential homes over 40 acres (16 hectares)—all with a 3D printer.
  • A print technician monitors Vulcan as its robotic arm and nozzle glide through the work site on a gantry.
  • The “ink” of this 3D printer is a special cement-based material called Lavacrete, a proprietary mixture designed for strength, affordable scale, and printability.
  • ICON is also working on a 3D-printed neighbourhood of homes near Austin.

3D printed hotel

Over a 40-acre (16-hectare) plot of land, El Cosmico, an already-existing hotel and campsite outside of Marfa, is constructing 18 residential dwellings and 43 new hotel apartments, all of which include 3D printing.

It is the world’s first 3D-printed hotel, says El Cosmico owner Liz Lambert and the partners behind the project – Austin, Texas-based 3D printing company ICON and architects Bjarke Ingels Group.

Lambert also added that the technology allows for unprecedented creativity.

“Most hotels are contained within four walls and a lot of times you are building the same unit over and over and over again,” Lambert said. “I’ve never been able to build with such little constraint and such fluidity … just the curves, the domes, and the parabolas. It’s a chaotic way to build.”

The units can include architectural features that would normally be too expensive to replicate on a large scale with traditional construction, according to Lambert.

The single-story, 12-foot (3.7-meter) high walls of the first two units under construction are a three-bedroom residential space and a single-room hotel unit. The curvy, beige-colored walls are being piped out by ICON’s Vulcan, a 46.5-feet (14.2 m) wide 3D printer standing 15.5 feet (4.7 m) and weighing 4.75 tons.

A print technician monitors Vulcan as its robotic arm and nozzle glide through the work site on a gantry.

The 3D printer

The “ink” of this 3D printer is a special cement-based material called Lavacrete, a proprietary mixture designed for strength, affordable scale, and printability. ICON CEO and founder Jason Ballard said workers adjust and blend the ingredients based on weather conditions.

“The magic happens in the admixtures that allow us to continue printing,” Ballard said, adding that humidity, temperature, and irradiance affect the material’s behaviour and even the final colour.

ICON is also working on a 3D-printed neighbourhood of homes near Austin.

In the long term, 3D-printed construction could displace some skilled laboring jobs, said Milad Bazli, a science and technology lecturer at Charles Darwin University in Australia.

“I think from the social point of view and the effect on the economy in terms of the local jobs, especially in remote areas, that will be one of the challenges that we need to consider when we’re going to the 3D printing method,” Bazli said.

The expansion of El Cosmico is set to be completed by 2026. The hotel units will range between $200 and $450 per night.

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