This Robot-Built House Could Change Everything

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024
  • The buyers of this new house in Australia are set to own a piece of history. Why? Because it was built by a great big robot. For more by Tomorrow’s Build subscribe now - bit.ly/3vOOJ98
    Executive Producer and Narrator - Fred Mills
    Producer - Adam Savage
    Video Editing and Graphics - Thomas Canton
    Special thanks to FBR and Mark Pivac.
    Additional footage and images courtesy of FBR, ABB/Gramazio Kohler Research, AIST, Brokk, ETH Zurich, Boston Dynamics, Construction Automation, Construction Robotics, GP Vivienda, Hilti, Printstones, Scaled Robotics and Walt Disney Pictures/Buena Vista Pictures Distribution.
    Follow us on Twitter - / tomorrowsbuild
    Like us on Facebook - / tomorrowsbuild
    Follow us on LinkedIn - / tomorrowsbuild
    Follow us on Instagram - / tomorrowsbuild
    #construction​ #architecture​ #technology
    Tomorrow's Build is owned and operated by The B1M Limited. We welcome you sharing our content to inspire others, but please be nice and play by our rules: www.theb1m.com/...
    Our content may only be embedded onto third party websites by arrangement. We have established partnerships with domains to share our content and help it reach a wider audience. If you are interested in partnering with us please contact Enquiries@TheB1M.com.
    Ripping and/or editing this video is illegal and will result in legal action.
    © 2021 The B1M Limited

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @RobinClower
    @RobinClower 3 года назад +1027

    This seems way better than the 3D printed homes. The tech is similar just faster, it's smaller and has less setup only requiring a single truck, and it's aesthetics are conventional

    • @SunSailor
      @SunSailor 3 года назад +75

      I would expect a mixture of both for the future, as conrete work is still needed. These baby steps only provide a single aspect, in combination, they may raise skyscapers in the future.

    • @kirkc9643
      @kirkc9643 3 года назад +6

      There was 2 vehicles

    • @pissyourselfandshitncoom2172
      @pissyourselfandshitncoom2172 3 года назад +29

      _"it's aesthetics are *conventional*"_
      That's not really valuable. Maybe for conservatives who value tradition. But change is welcomed by everyone else. Progress is a good thing

    • @nathangraham2895
      @nathangraham2895 3 года назад +13

      I think a great solution would be a hybrid, 3d printing the walls and using a robot arm for other stuff such as building the roof and adding windows

    • @reksiohundson8706
      @reksiohundson8706 3 года назад +9

      Nope , I think answer is combination of those two techniques . as building 2 stories could be issue with only one technology , my proposition would be : for first floor use robot building with bricks , and for second floor 3D printed .
      (BTW ground floor I count as first floor , and first as second)

  • @Xiph1980
    @Xiph1980 3 года назад +401

    Interesting machine, but man, that neighborhood looks horrific! What's the use of a freestanding home if you don't actually use the area for a garden? Might as well get an apartment.

    • @woodvineandco
      @woodvineandco 3 года назад +35

      Unfortunately that's how they look anyway. So probably nothing todo with the machine. As soon as I saw the thumbnail I was like looks like all the crap they build in Perth.

    • @DanielFenandes
      @DanielFenandes 3 года назад +37

      You think this.neighbourhood Look horrific? Lol that is surely a first world problem.

    • @neeljavia2965
      @neeljavia2965 3 года назад +14

      @@DanielFenandes Exactly.

    • @akalion213
      @akalion213 3 года назад +22

      @@DanielFenandes Yeah no shit dude he's not comparing it to an African hovel.

    • @DanielFenandes
      @DanielFenandes 3 года назад +16

      @@akalion213 you'd be shocked to know that probably 80% of the world lives in a worse looking neighborhood than this

  • @supercadet111
    @supercadet111 3 года назад +54

    Am I the only one not seeing the bonding agent (mortar) in these videos? Or is this just marketing stuff, so they didn't want the true messy look in their B role?

    • @user-fs4sm8lt4u
      @user-fs4sm8lt4u 3 года назад +5

      Exactly.where is the fucking mortar.I only see a black mix being poored for steel bar anchorage in the brick cause i think its a reinforced masonry structure

    • @OperationDarkside
      @OperationDarkside 3 года назад +2

      You can see it in some scenes. Maybe the scenes you mean, are engineering footage. Also a machine needs less mortar, because it doesn't need it to correct errors.

    • @jimurrata6785
      @jimurrata6785 3 года назад +1

      The arm is wiping it on the bottom/head joint as the hand pivots the brick away from the conveyor.
      I'm assuming the threaded rod being installed by humans is going to be grouted solid into the cavities.

    • @craigmortell
      @craigmortell 3 года назад +5

      it uses an adhesive rather than mortar.

    • @johnschroeder3072
      @johnschroeder3072 3 года назад

      @@jimurrata6785 There was some footage of grout or similar being poured in around some of the rod.

  • @goober7535
    @goober7535 3 года назад +18

    I love the level of thought put into each of these videos. Instead of just advertising new tech like other channels you guys question the claims made by these companies. Love it.

  • @oasishurl
    @oasishurl 3 года назад +22

    Having it on a truck is genius. MIT was working on this, but they settled for only building things with light and a long exposure photograph...They were so close to the future of construction.

    • @kareandersson
      @kareandersson 3 месяца назад

      If I can buy that house for half the cost of a regular house, I am all for it.

  • @DrClausewitz
    @DrClausewitz 3 года назад +427

    a normal build neighbourhood lmao. this looks pretty confusing for a european

    • @TomorrowsBuild
      @TomorrowsBuild  3 года назад +72

      We hear you 😂

    • @user-uf2df6zf5w
      @user-uf2df6zf5w 3 года назад +12

      I dont understand the joke.

    • @Migzeh
      @Migzeh 3 года назад +23

      I live in Perth where this house is. Every suburb in the last 30 years looks like this. Whats confusing about it?

    • @BrosBrothersLP
      @BrosBrothersLP 3 года назад +137

      @@Migzeh whyare the houses 95% of the land. Where are the trees. Why does everyhouse look the same. Why is everything rectangular

    • @olmkiujnb
      @olmkiujnb 3 года назад +52

      And why is everything only single or double story? European architecture differs starkly from american/australian architecture due to less space available

  • @lemster101
    @lemster101 3 года назад +350

    Proud to see this in Australia. A little less proud to see the types of homes we're still building (massive footprint, poor use of space, zero insulation)

    • @SensationsRim
      @SensationsRim 3 года назад +12

      Wow. No insulation at all? Cheapo developers. I woundnt want to live in brick/cinderblock house in an earthquake zone anyway. Maybe it's reinforced but I still wouldn't want I live in a crumbly Lego house

    • @NadeemAhmed-nv2br
      @NadeemAhmed-nv2br 3 года назад +18

      You do know concrete itself is a mess of insulator compared to Wood homes with fiberglass. They have better insulation right off the bat even though they don't have fiberglass and their insulation holds up over time versus leaks that develop in Wood homes within twenty years and I say that as a person who has a concrete home that doesn't use any fiberglass or foam insulation and even 40 years later, whenever I put all the blinds up and turn on the heater for a little bit, I can goa day without turning it back on and only for a little if that

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 3 года назад +26

      @@SensationsRim I live in the city shown. We don't have earthquakes here. We've got caves with 40,000 year old paintings & even a rockshelf with Dinosaur footprints still showing on it. I was in Japan once when they had a little quake that didn't bother the locals, but it scared the beJesus out of me because I'd never been near one. And double brick is a great insulator, & we put some recycled stuff in roofs now.

    • @lemster101
      @lemster101 3 года назад +8

      @@NadeemAhmed-nv2brI wasn't referring to the concrete outer walls on their own, but to the build as a whole. Fact is that our country builds cheap homes with next to no insulation. Regardless of material used for the walls. High efficiency glazing is a foreign concept here for example. The construction code regarding efficiency is minimal. People are used to using heaters and air conditioners for everything and have no problem running them all day.

    • @letsburn00
      @letsburn00 3 года назад +6

      @@SensationsRim This is Perth. The lowest temperature we ever recorded here is -1C. About 30F.

  • @woodvineandco
    @woodvineandco 3 года назад +291

    Before anyone blames the machine that's just how bad average new neighbourhoods look in Perth.

    • @steve8421
      @steve8421 3 года назад +34

      Give me land. You look out the windows in this Australian housing development and see nothing but the walls of your neighbors house.

    • @waylonk2453
      @waylonk2453 3 года назад +12

      I couldn't bear living there

    • @woodvineandco
      @woodvineandco 3 года назад +7

      @@waylonk2453 it's my nightmare 😂 😂 😂

    • @AcidJiles
      @AcidJiles 3 года назад +25

      Australia has loads of space. Why the terrible space usage and dislike of 2nd stories?

    • @garcsstuff6734
      @garcsstuff6734 3 года назад +5

      @@AcidJiles house prices

  • @malachaiuys711
    @malachaiuys711 3 года назад +127

    *Why does a literal continent, that has a mere 20-something million people living in it, have to build homes in such a cramped manor with no yard space?*

    • @christcombiccombichrist2651
      @christcombiccombichrist2651 3 года назад +10

      Concentration camp

    • @brendanrodgers9753
      @brendanrodgers9753 3 года назад +17

      Because a majority of their population is tucked into the far South East, majority of their land is outback

    • @brendanrodgers9753
      @brendanrodgers9753 3 года назад +3

      @Timothy Mckee I was referring to Australia

    • @brendanrodgers9753
      @brendanrodgers9753 3 года назад +2

      but I hope the Chinese people overcome that 🙏

    • @someonegotwill
      @someonegotwill 3 года назад +11

      because 85% of the population lives within 50km of the coast; the centre is a desert and no-one can, let alone want to, feasibly live there

  • @FPVsean
    @FPVsean 3 года назад +83

    I'm irish and that neighbourhood looks rather odd, houses are very squashed together, and there's no back yards or recreational space around the homes.. Wouldn't Australians want to be able to relax out in the sun on cooler days and evenings??

    • @Xiph1980
      @Xiph1980 3 года назад +34

      My idea exactly. That neighborhood looks completely soulless.

    • @FPVsean
      @FPVsean 3 года назад +19

      @@Xiph1980 my suburban nightmare lol

    • @georgescott6967
      @georgescott6967 3 года назад +22

      It's a modern housing estate where the developer's only aim is to maximize profit - livability is not a concern. The smaller each block of land the greater the number, the greater the profit. The limiting factor will be planning regulations.

    • @michaelbarnett2077
      @michaelbarnett2077 3 года назад +3

      The Australian dream right there. Classic modern subdivision, pack them in, build cheap houses, make profit!

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 3 года назад +4

      I make my living servicing swimming pools in neighbourhoods just like this one. Some houses do have more room than appears in these shots. But they are way closer together in new suburbs. Some of these poor bastards spend 2 hours a day in traffic because they'd rather live in a house than an apartment. I guess it's easier if you've got kids.

  • @MattCooperKay
    @MattCooperKay 3 года назад +144

    I'm confused by the intentional gap between each brick?

    • @JackSparrow-hh2lh
      @JackSparrow-hh2lh 3 года назад +35

      insulation most likely. an air gap insulates a lot better than you might think, its very common in germany for example

    • @DanielRichards644
      @DanielRichards644 3 года назад +32

      dry stacking the bricks, must be a test run of the machine to make sure everything is functioning right, I would expect they took them down and redid it with Mortar.

    • @DanielRichards644
      @DanielRichards644 3 года назад +49

      @@JackSparrow-hh2lh a gap between an inner and outer layer of wall sure, but these gaps are not that, gaps like this would be a massive air leak.

    • @CristMakhanya
      @CristMakhanya 3 года назад +1

      For steal re enforcement.

    • @Mr_G_in_Alba
      @Mr_G_in_Alba 3 года назад +9

      The gaps you mention are usually filled by the bricklayer, not only do filled "perps" close the cavity between outer and inner skin, but they give the wall a greater structural strength and added stability. I doubt it will be a massive issue for them to fix, but as is........ i doubt the house wouldn't pass UK inspection.

  • @almostanengineer
    @almostanengineer 3 года назад +105

    This looks more promising than 3D printed houses.

  • @ravenfeeder1892
    @ravenfeeder1892 3 года назад +134

    Given the accuracy of lasers couldn't the bricks be laid so close togeter they don't need as much if any mortar. Especially if you have jigsaw shaped joints at each end. Some stone and bronze age buildings had amazingly tight toleances between stones and those are weatherproof 3000 years later.

    • @trizthe1
      @trizthe1 3 года назад +1

      👏👏🙌

    • @Shadow1986
      @Shadow1986 3 года назад +8

      It's not the accuracy of measurement that's the issue, it's keeping a big heavy brick so steady at the end of a long beam

    • @marabooq7150
      @marabooq7150 3 года назад +8

      The way the Incas built their structures is also a beautiful example of this, with their terraces and such not needing mortar due to how carefully they shaped the stones they used there!

    • @aquariandawn4750
      @aquariandawn4750 3 года назад +6

      @@marabooq7150 don't forget, the Incas have always historically denied being the builders of the megalithic structures.

    • @marabooq7150
      @marabooq7150 3 года назад +3

      @@aquariandawn4750 ooh I did not know that, thanks for sharing

  • @Uberfluous404
    @Uberfluous404 3 года назад +120

    "Those workers could be retrained to do"
    yeah right. Because Brickies are computer savvy.

    • @metadreamland
      @metadreamland 3 года назад +9

      How hard do you think training is nigga

    • @collection6062
      @collection6062 3 года назад +6

      @@metadreamland not hard when everyone has a computer injected into their brain.

    • @waylonk2453
      @waylonk2453 3 года назад

      You got a laugh out of me. So true!

    • @MattYZFR125
      @MattYZFR125 3 года назад +1

      Give em some coke and your sorted 😂

    • @garfieldarbackle3363
      @garfieldarbackle3363 3 года назад

      Wendover Productions: Am I a joke to you?

  • @studylondon5362
    @studylondon5362 3 года назад +80

    Imagine ordering a house on amazon and tracking its progress within the app....

    • @absolutelynotnormal
      @absolutelynotnormal 3 года назад +2

      Not a bad idea. Lol 😆

    • @mikelytou
      @mikelytou 3 года назад +4

      Hm. Free shipping, 1 day Delivery in big cities, 30 days return policy?
      I'd definitely consider it.

    • @alexismiller288
      @alexismiller288 3 года назад +4

      Certainly possible. Sears had homes made to order from mail catalogues a hundred years ago.

    • @seBcopTer
      @seBcopTer 3 года назад +1

      It will happen!

  • @Richard-qh8my
    @Richard-qh8my 2 года назад +21

    I'm a builder in Florida, USA. This would be great for our area as we build mostly with concrete block for our structures and not wood frame. While 3D printing is an interesting idea, the transition and/or adoption here would probably be an issue. We engineer our structures to with stand hurricane winds so having a machine that uses our current concrete blocks would be great.

    • @mefobills279
      @mefobills279 Год назад

      The blocks are justified. That means they are cut to precise dimensions. That is why such thin joints

    • @user-rp5sr6os7u
      @user-rp5sr6os7u Год назад

      For the prices of home in Florida, they need to have steel all the way up to the roof, like what we use in Jamaica.

  • @ShakilAhmed-kf5nd
    @ShakilAhmed-kf5nd 3 года назад +47

    Future advertisement - "You can't replace the character from a hand-made home. Buy a genuine human built house today!"

    • @waylonk2453
      @waylonk2453 3 года назад +3

      Haha, seriously! Though I don't see robots being used on the construction site for any other work than menial tasks. I do home renovation, and lemme tell ya there's a lot of nuances involved with interior finish work.

    • @RedstoneNinja99
      @RedstoneNinja99 3 года назад +1

      Watch the show Humans

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 3 года назад

      @@waylonk2453 It would take a lot of technology to replace skilled finish carpentry!

    • @edwardsisson3580
      @edwardsisson3580 3 года назад

      More human...than human

  • @kestekrafts1580
    @kestekrafts1580 3 года назад +13

    loved that stock footage comment at the end, was on point

  • @wadeguidry6675
    @wadeguidry6675 3 года назад +11

    This reminds me of the robotic packing machine we used at a chemical plant in the production of large rubber blocks. The last step before shipping was to pack these 75 pound blocks into an aluminum container that held one ton of them. It stacked them in a certain pattern that was efficient and safe for shipping.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад +1

      Excellent use of mechanical advantage. Better than lifting them yourself !

  • @Samuel_J1
    @Samuel_J1 3 года назад +165

    At first I thought the machine looked really slow, and then you say it's 10x faster than a human brickie!

    • @geomonabe
      @geomonabe 3 года назад +21

      well the bricks are 12x bigger, so makes sense

    • @thirdvect0r
      @thirdvect0r 3 года назад +36

      Just make the brickie 12x bigger, simple really.

    • @kaneworthington
      @kaneworthington 3 года назад +1

      @@thirdvect0r 😂😂

    • @dominick253
      @dominick253 3 года назад

      @@thirdvect0r cinder block

    • @Dawid-kn6mv
      @Dawid-kn6mv 3 года назад +3

      And 30 times more expensive.

  • @voidremoved
    @voidremoved 3 года назад +39

    there is no hope for the future.
    Look at all those houses, packed together. They might as well live in a big apartment building and have less of a footprint. You live so close together anyways. Stack those houses up and use the land for parks, gardens, nature, food, wildlife, sanity.

    • @s4lino
      @s4lino 3 года назад

      Use delivery robot for concierge while you at it for those simpler tasks like delivering letter, uber eats and a parcel through dedicated lifts and free the main man or woman stationed for smarter tasks and we are heading into the future

    • @xn4pl
      @xn4pl 3 года назад +4

      Go and buy an apartment in multiple stories building and enjoy noisy neighbors screaming, stomping, dogs barking for any reason, constantly drilling something, drowning your apartment from time to time, close your water, because they repairing leaky tubes, etc. But let people decide for themself if they want to live in their own home, without neighbors behind their wall, having even though small but still a patch of real land that they own, having a garage where they can store their car without sharing a space in parking lot and store instruments and parts they can use to care about it. Earth is big and there's still a LOT of places where people aren't cramped like in Europe, so we still can choose how sparse we want to live. Any choice has its pros and cons and it's up to everyone to decide for themself depending on their situation.

    • @captainpinky8307
      @captainpinky8307 2 года назад

      people don't want to hear their neighbor's talking which is why they hate apartments. also fire's remember things catch fire.

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen 2 года назад

      Large apartments aren't the only option, rowhouses, etc, can be a great compromise

    • @Bertuzz84
      @Bertuzz84 2 года назад

      Yes i agree, why does the anglosphere always have these weird ways of doing stuff. I loved my row house suburb where we all had football fields, swings and slides to play. Also ponds were everywhere throughout the neighborhood. This just seems like some hyper individualistic massive personal space but no common space model. It's like a segregated neighborhood. Kids would feel practically imprisoned, because they can't go anywhere due everything being so far apart.
      My parents were contemplating moving to Australia, New zeeland or canada when i was a kid. I'm glad that we didn't end up leaving the Netherlands for one of these kind of soulless neighborhoods.

  • @stevechance150
    @stevechance150 2 года назад +6

    Average house price in the US in 2021 is $375,000.
    After robots start building houses and cut the "labor" cost in half, the average house price will be $375,000.

    • @T1Oracle
      @T1Oracle 2 года назад +2

      In other unrelated news, yatch purchases are up and there's a new shortage in private jet pilots...

    • @haha-eg8fj
      @haha-eg8fj 2 года назад

      That's a good thing, isn't it? You need people to dig the materials out and turn them into robots and you also need salespeople to sell them to development companies.

  • @bdawg3942
    @bdawg3942 3 года назад +3

    As a long term shareholder, I’ve enjoyed reading the comments and that FBR are finally getting some decent exposure 💪.
    Firstly, FBR are about offering simple and affordable housing, and are in existing talks with both Saudi & Mexico.Both we’re released as announcements on ASX, and we have no reason to believe that they aren’t still active.
    The adhesive is used by European builders, and both Weinerberger and Xella are in MOU agreements with FBR and both announcements were released on the ASX. Once again we have no reason to believe that they aren’t still active.
    Also the environmental benefits of the HX with minimum waste, able to work 24hrs, will also be a massive selling point.
    Perth is a very sandy , hot & harsh place in the summer and we are currently experiencing a much cooler wet and windy winter.
    Please don’t take this as financial advice, it’s just a quick insight into FBR, I’ve held for years and believe this could assist with the worlds lack off housing 😊👍

  • @Mufcforever-sl2gf
    @Mufcforever-sl2gf 3 года назад +28

    Not gonna lie I doubt many building companies are gonna fork out to retrain bricklayers when automation takes over. Wishful thinking I guess

    • @geomonabe
      @geomonabe 3 года назад +5

      they may just lay off the layers. pun unintended

    • @ceoatcrystalsoft4942
      @ceoatcrystalsoft4942 3 года назад +1

      It's a long term process. The jobs will be converted over but capitalists won't directly help their employees they layoff

    • @ianfirth33
      @ianfirth33 3 года назад +6

      Brickies won't run out of work, average Brickie in Oz is aged 50+, brickies are a dying breed. brickies demand a premium in Perth atm.

    • @massimoscognamiglio7369
      @massimoscognamiglio7369 2 года назад +2

      They'd go into other trades. Become painters, welders, carpenters; depending on age, interest, and local opportunities.

    • @photovideooz4084
      @photovideooz4084 2 года назад

      they going to get new jobs and educations, they'll become robotic specialist one day.

  • @QuentinWatt
    @QuentinWatt 2 года назад +40

    Building houses shown at 0:42 makes me question why these people don't just live in apartment blocks.
    Do you have no love for outdoor spaces in your back yards?
    I get that building codes probably won't let them go double story, but honestly if the whole neighbourhood just ends up looking like this, it's a monumental waste of good space.

    • @photovideooz4084
      @photovideooz4084 2 года назад +1

      you can put your own design on CAD system.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад +3

      What actually happens is builders try to cram as much house on to as cheap and small a piece of land as possible! Disgusting these new subdivisions, with little to no side separation or backyard as with houses built in the past. Dollars count, so land sizes are reduced, and couples desire all the mod-cons, so houses get bigger, land gets smaller !

    • @TheGuyThatEveryoneIgnores
      @TheGuyThatEveryoneIgnores 2 года назад

      They might as well just build townhouses.

    • @ConstructiveMinds100
      @ConstructiveMinds100 2 года назад

      Housing crisis is because human greed. NOT BECAUSE OF LUCK OF ROBOTS. HOW STUPID SOME PEOPLE MUST BE TO SPREAD SUCH BS.

    • @nigelsmith7955
      @nigelsmith7955 2 года назад +1

      Living that close together with absolutely no privacy, no yard, one spark and you loose a whole block! Wonder if you made people move into nice spacious apartment building only say four floors, nice shared green space with real trees even!! Or with roof top gardens they would freak out! Even better just build one long house along the whole block stick a flat roof on the apartment strip and under ground parking! Lol! This is really a horrible way to live like this!!! If this was a poor neighborhood they would be calling it a slum….

  • @johngullo9420
    @johngullo9420 3 года назад +10

    Wow. Those houses are really jammed close together.

    • @DaiAnanta
      @DaiAnanta Год назад +2

      Looks terrible. You can tell by all the buildings that overcrowd any city or smushed together suburb that humans still haven't learned to live in harmony with nature. People sure know how to fatten their pockets though.

    • @puffinjuice
      @puffinjuice Год назад

      Hideous. I would never buy in such an ugly neighbourhood. If you don't want a garden, then buy an apartment or town house!

  • @timwasko847
    @timwasko847 3 года назад +6

    Maybe for the masonry industry. But this robot isn’t changing anything for the Electricial, plumbing, hvac. So much more goes into a building then just laying the brick.

    • @haha-eg8fj
      @haha-eg8fj 3 года назад

      It takes time to evolve.

    • @timwasko847
      @timwasko847 3 года назад +2

      @@haha-eg8fj ya everyone knows that. The title literally says this robot built house when all the robot does is lay the bricks…. That’s why I said way more goes into a house then the bricks. This is not a robot built house…. It’s a house with robot laid bricks that is all that it is.

  • @jackburton8947
    @jackburton8947 3 года назад +7

    The claw knows where it is because it knows where it isn’t.

  • @AlecMuller
    @AlecMuller 3 года назад +18

    The robotic system looks great, but for future videos on topics like this, could you explain how the gaps between bricks are filled in more detail? Is the glue only on the bottom surfaces of the brick and the sides get filled when you pour the internal vertical holes?

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад +1

      Holes are not filled. Just glued top n bottom.

  • @HeHeHaHa146
    @HeHeHaHa146 3 года назад +2

    4:00 THE CLAW 🤣😂 good job editor

  • @dfs7979
    @dfs7979 3 года назад +28

    I’m confused about the wall assembly. Is there external EPS insulation added? What is common practice to finish the interior? Are furring strips added then plaster board? I saw some dot and dabbing in one of the clips. Are utilities run through the floor and into the brick or through a chase between the brick and plaster?

    • @Spazwozzler
      @Spazwozzler 3 года назад +17

      The houses here in Perth are double brick exterior. The interior is finished with render/plaster and then painted. Utilities are run through the roof space and down into the wall cavity, or the walls are chased if it's an internal wall.

    • @kcheong00
      @kcheong00 3 года назад +1

      You can also direct stick plaster using masonry glue.
      Plasterers don't love using it all the time but don't mind. The biggest issue with the masonry glue is ensuring you stick perfectly flat and plumb.
      Because the brick wall was precision laid, it should be perfectly flat (in theory, haven't seen the product in practice). You can use smaller dabs of glue to reduce the amount of small humps in the plaster.
      You don't necessarily have services in all the walls. If so, i'm sure they can use furring channels or have the services chase it into the wall.
      I highly doubt insulation was added to internal walls, since it is brick which provides are decent amount of insulation.
      Common practice is plasterboard on the inside. Only in very special cases plaster white set render is used.

    • @Thevikingcam
      @Thevikingcam 3 года назад

      This system is a bit fake, there is NO way the bricks just stands without any clueing layer between them, on the bottom and sides. I bet the bricks what the machine did they just removed them and manually, by hand, laid them with plaster etc. Polyurethane isn't too enough to "glue" without filling the inside of those bricks with cement . In my eyes this is still far away from real application to be used anywhere.

    • @onetrueone
      @onetrueone 3 года назад +2

      @@Thevikingcam There is glue on the bricks and they did reinforce it with metal beams inside the bricks and filled it up with some liquid that probably hardens.

    • @raucousreg9064
      @raucousreg9064 3 года назад +3

      The blocks have cavities which line up - no need to chase

  • @jamescrud
    @jamescrud 3 года назад +11

    Seems like it does just a small part of the total construction tasks.

    • @laundrylurker3242
      @laundrylurker3242 3 года назад

      That's the point...?

    • @dimvoly
      @dimvoly 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, you can't even get off the critical path after the machine as you still need the roof trusses + roofing. And 3 days for a machine per house is a joke, hope they improve that aspect. Should be less than a day per house.

    • @tigeroll
      @tigeroll 3 года назад

      @@dimvoly I think it will be soon and they could use two brick laying trucks to be twice as fast. They may even be able to coordinate 3 brick laying trucks for large homes to be built in a day.

    • @StormComing247
      @StormComing247 3 года назад

      But it disrupted many steps in the house building process as explained, any small disrupting stone will have a big ripple in the construction industry

  • @cassandra5390
    @cassandra5390 3 года назад +6

    But human beings NEED these jobs and most of them who do these jobs actually enjoy doing them. So how is this going to solve a housing crisis??? How when we have lost even more of our jobs to robots. TRAIN AND HIRE MORE PEOPLE TO DO THESE JOBS!
    We have all of these abandoned homes in so many cities just sitting and ROTTING because nobody is living in them to care for them and we are talking about a housing crisis??? And robots are the answer?
    I don't think so.

    • @haha-eg8fj
      @haha-eg8fj 3 года назад

      Yes why not train more people to dig holes and plow the farmlands? We are not living in the 19th century. You can even make money by building a RUclips channel. Why waste your time complaining about robots stealing jobs?

    • @Fanta....
      @Fanta.... 3 года назад +2

      Try being a brickie's labourer. these jobs are complete shit and the sooner the robots can do them the better.

    • @ekaterinavalinakova2643
      @ekaterinavalinakova2643 3 года назад +1

      They are rubbish jobs to begin with. It's about time they get automated. Also, the goal should be to figure out economic systems to be compatible with a hyper automated world, not the other way around.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      @@ekaterinavalinakova2643 You and Fanta are talking sense. Get a better job.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 3 года назад +26

    The natural reaction to a shrinking workforce is to pay attractive wages.

    • @thenormalyears
      @thenormalyears 3 года назад +13

      they would rather die than pay people enough to live on

    • @fardinahsan2069
      @fardinahsan2069 3 года назад +5

      The natural reaction to to go for the cheapest route possible.

    • @xaviercopeland2789
      @xaviercopeland2789 3 года назад +1

      No it’s is not in any sense.

    • @Lexman00
      @Lexman00 3 года назад +1

      OR, don't give people "free" money. OR, bring in immigrants. OR, just tell the government to stop stealing people's wealth via money supply expansion.

    • @JRWall-hf9mq
      @JRWall-hf9mq 3 года назад +5

      ​@@Lexman00 - Sounds like you want to return to the 1800s, when working people were treated as cogs, disposable, worked to death, practically and effectively slaves. Children getting in industrial accidents at a disturbing rate. Absolute poverty as far as the eye can see. All of us choking on peasouper goop - nothing quite like brown, oily rain to remind you of your place. All so Johnny Banks can have another million in his pockets.
      Maybe that's not what you think will happen, but if we start revering back to guided age policy, we revert back to the guilded age, which was, without a doubt, the second worst time to be alive. (The worst being when the Black Plague was at its peak).
      Your ideology of radical individualism and your crippling, Dawinistic, dog-eat-dog mentality KILLS people. We are a social animal. It could be said that we're a pack animal. Your beliefs are homicidal and go against our natural instincts. They make existence on every level worse. All to benefit a few psychopaths.
      Regulation saves lives. Social security saves lives. Universal healthcare and education saves lives. A jobs guarantee saves lives. Community saves lives. Collaboration and cooperation rather than competition saves lives and more importantly makes life worth living for the greater majority.

  • @takudzwamashamba7453
    @takudzwamashamba7453 3 года назад +1

    Real people have bought it with real money - that’s assuring!

  • @curtiscarpenter9881
    @curtiscarpenter9881 3 года назад +4

    More passive housing what the UK needs. Insulated concrete forms ICF'S, more affordable housing rebuilding in wasteland in cities even 3D printed houses too, replacing outdated methods.

  • @mathewhowe4185
    @mathewhowe4185 2 года назад +6

    I hope this company does really well as I bought shares in them 5 years ago. I just think we are not going to going backwards with technology anytime soon. Humans and machines have been working side by side for hundreds of years. Let's hope we can keep it that way and get some nice comfy houses along the way. Keep at it FBR!

    • @Catthepunk
      @Catthepunk Год назад +1

      How is the company going?

  • @projectw.a.a.p.f.t.a.d7762
    @projectw.a.a.p.f.t.a.d7762 3 года назад +2

    Technologies are slowly getting into every industry and it will revolutionize them all.

  • @MadMadOne
    @MadMadOne 3 года назад +1

    Don't expect these homes to cost less in USA. Somehow they managed to make prefab homes more expensive than site built homes.

  • @dsjjvfdjkdd
    @dsjjvfdjkdd 3 года назад +4

    8:53 Lol. The light shining across the wall shows the "super accurate" brick placement
    The gaps between the bricks also wasn't explained.

    • @mick0matic
      @mick0matic 2 года назад

      You can actually see the arm move as it sets and loads a new brick. Very accurate indeed..

  • @ssruiimxwaeeayezbbttirvorg9372
    @ssruiimxwaeeayezbbttirvorg9372 3 года назад +6

    don't compere it with bricks laying, compare with cinder-block/foamcrete blocks laying

    • @massimoscognamiglio7369
      @massimoscognamiglio7369 2 года назад +1

      I'd like direct comparisons with cost of labor. That machine looks expensive to operate, with its own custom bricks. How does it stack up against a crew of guys?

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      @@massimoscognamiglio7369 It will only work on large, boring projects where it can be cost efficient to bring it on site.

    • @massimoscognamiglio7369
      @massimoscognamiglio7369 2 года назад

      ​@@linmal2242 I hope this thing never operates in my country. It would cause there to be less money for the working man, and more money for corporations.

  • @artakarakelyan1632
    @artakarakelyan1632 3 года назад +2

    Can build the walls of a house in less than 3 days. Just not with cement blocks but lumber. Which is more environmentally safe and easier to re work when you want change the layout of your home or additions.

    • @jasond3918
      @jasond3918 3 года назад +1

      People in Perth have been brainwashed over the years that anything other than double brick construction is inferior.

    • @johnschroeder3072
      @johnschroeder3072 3 года назад

      @@jasond3918 It is. Double brick has better thermal properties, greater strength, longer lifespan sharing the slight increase in initial environmental cost over a longer time giving it a net environmental benefit especially as there is more and more recycling of concrete and rubble

    • @jasond3918
      @jasond3918 3 года назад

      @@johnschroeder3072 My understanding is reverse brick veneer is the better thermal option.

  • @MrLeonardoibarra
    @MrLeonardoibarra 3 года назад +2

    You had me on "The claaw", congrats for the great content.

  • @peterc2248
    @peterc2248 3 года назад +4

    I'm nearly sixty and I've seen a lot of change in my time - computers, mobile phones, the internet and so on. I worry that we are moving too fast for our own collective good. Sure, we can do these amazing things but in my view, we need to take the time to ask if we should do them. Our species has been knocking about for a mere instant in geological/evolutionary time and the last three hundred or so years has seen us make some really bad decisions not just for the planet but also our long term future. I admire the technology, innovation and engineering but I'm less certain of the philosophy behind it all...

    • @jonathantewnes1224
      @jonathantewnes1224 3 года назад +1

      Well said!!

    • @isakjohansson7134
      @isakjohansson7134 2 года назад

      I agree, i'm 21 but i dont like how digitalized things have become, at least you can use cash in most places

  • @membear
    @membear 3 года назад +5

    Wouldn't it be easier to use prebuilt wall sections like 10 feet tall by 6 feet wide, some will have windows already cut in and others will have doorways cut in.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      I just watched them go up yesterday. Big crane, semi load of pre-casts, lots of blokes in hard hats! Had them all up in one day! More tomorrow.

  • @Lakish_Narayan
    @Lakish_Narayan 3 года назад +1

    Pause a few milliseconds after [8:53] the light shining over gives a better outlook on block placement accuracy, but definitely, an exciting innovation would be great to see how thing progresses over the next few years!!

  • @sharongillesp
    @sharongillesp 2 года назад +1

    With the roof off it looks like an elaborate maze.

  • @kittehRwin
    @kittehRwin 3 года назад +5

    Good Bye construction labor jobs
    In Australia, the barriers to homeownership are to do with price, and have about 3% of housing that is empty which could home the entire homeless population twice over.

    • @HowlinMadBob
      @HowlinMadBob 3 года назад

      yeah, you think they give someone a small dwelling and they can work to live in it...oh wait, that's what we all do now.. Ok IDK then.

    • @birdrocket
      @birdrocket 2 года назад

      3% is actually super low vacancy and includes housing that is between occupants, empty for renovations, dilapidated, etc. Building more housing helps raise the vacancy rate, and lower rent prices. More vacancy gives renters more power in negotiations with landlords, too, and it helps people find places that they want to live in easier and with fewer roommates.
      That being said, we still do need a housing-first approach to helping the homeless

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      @@birdrocket Spot on. Whatever happened to the state housing commissions?

  • @polishfinnish3066
    @polishfinnish3066 3 года назад +16

    Let's be honest what's the point of building houses that close to eachother when you have no yard for privacy... Mind as well build apartments with some green spaces...

    • @theodoremurdock9984
      @theodoremurdock9984 3 года назад

      I think these are usually built in cities whose zoning laws forbid medium- density housing. They’re technically single-family detached houses, so they’re legal to build.

    • @datesxx3162
      @datesxx3162 3 года назад +1

      Australia is dealing with a house crisis.. well sorta. The More homes you can squeeze into a area. The more people live there. The more money the city gets. As a Australian I’m used to this layout of buildings and every Australian is basically accepted it as norm.
      I get each country is different but the most of Australians get along with the people next door unless you live in a poor area to where people with illegal addictions end up being your neighbour.

    • @polishfinnish3066
      @polishfinnish3066 3 года назад

      @@theodoremurdock9984 yea you're probably right. It's more ugly than if the zoning allowed medium density tbh. I had a new subdivision that has about 10-15ft distance between houses and it looks ugly. This looks like it's less than 10.
      The problem I'm noticing is in the US we are building out instead of up which makes creating a good transit system unfeasible due to population density. In simple terms we are making ourselves more reliant on the car and driving farther.

    • @polishfinnish3066
      @polishfinnish3066 3 года назад +1

      @@datesxx3162 I grew up in a suburb in the US which had alot of green space. Over time there's been residential development particularly the packing in style which strips away from these green spaces. Frankly it's an eyesore and a waste of space.
      I guess the best way to say it is if you're gonna put them this close making the town look like a city mind as well build it like a proper city in the first place.

  • @infradig696
    @infradig696 3 года назад +2

    That robot is actually the leader of the Freemasons now.

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 3 года назад

      What have we done? It's only a matter of time before it replaces the Great Architect! Oh, the humanity.

  • @ianfirth33
    @ianfirth33 3 года назад +2

    Hx also works in heavy rain, demonstrated on three builds now.

  • @arec_s7
    @arec_s7 3 года назад +3

    Tsutomu Nihei's, "Blame!," anyone? is this the first "Builder?" 👾

  • @WhiteTriForce
    @WhiteTriForce 3 года назад +4

    Even with automation, you will always need a human involved ! 🎯 I was a Unimate robot operator in the 1980s ! 👇😎👍

  • @coffeecupwithtea
    @coffeecupwithtea 3 года назад +1

    Whats to stop supply companies from creating "bricks" that are several feet tall, since the robot can presumably handle the weight? that should reduce the total time significantly..

    • @ianfirth33
      @ianfirth33 3 года назад +2

      Actually, that is happening, FBR's next gen HX110 is going to use 600mm blocks.

  • @freetobe3
    @freetobe3 Год назад

    As long as the walls aren't as bent as the ones on my parents house... Look like the crew had beer for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

  • @Jameson1776
    @Jameson1776 3 года назад +3

    I am a commercial carpenter and worked on a police station when a robot was trialed on my job. It ended up having to be redone because of subpar mortar placement. This was about 5-7 years ago so things may have changed.

    • @TomorrowsBuild
      @TomorrowsBuild  3 года назад +2

      That's interesting to hear. What was the reaction to it being on site? What did people make of it?

    • @Jameson1776
      @Jameson1776 3 года назад

      @@TomorrowsBuild well I’ll tell you the masons where the happy it being there. But it was pretty cool to see. Wish I would have taken pictures of it.

    • @Jameson1776
      @Jameson1776 3 года назад

      Also besides the masons it does cause worry for other tradesmen about job security. As well as the pension and good pay as union members we have been working towards an schooled for. But in the end I’m a big nerd for new technology and do see the benefits.

  • @noone-qg1od
    @noone-qg1od 3 года назад +8

    Well at least that's all the brick layers out of work, who's next?

  • @isommallory9473
    @isommallory9473 2 года назад +1

    Robots may build homes in the future, but I can guarantee you that the prices of homes will not go down.

  • @scratchinjack608
    @scratchinjack608 2 года назад

    One word when it comes to these kinds of builds: Earthquakes. A problem?

  • @thisislilraskal
    @thisislilraskal 3 года назад +7

    I'd love to see more of this kind of technology in future videos

  • @thefrub
    @thefrub 3 года назад +5

    Imagine if we were allowed to build our own homes like they did back in the 50's. Nowadays you need so many licences and it will still cost you about half the price of a new one. No more $2,000 sears kits.

    • @alexiscardetailing2678
      @alexiscardetailing2678 3 года назад

      First home ever owned (mom and dad) was a sears kit home at 40'000$! :( We all miss those days.

    • @waylonk2453
      @waylonk2453 3 года назад +2

      Our family is building a house to live in right now. My father is quite skilled with everything structural and can do finish work too. We hired a company to pour the foundation, a plumber for plumbing and an electrician for electrical/lighting. All you need to have in my town is a zoning permit, and then you're all set!

    • @alexiscardetailing2678
      @alexiscardetailing2678 3 года назад +1

      @@waylonk2453 that's amazing!! Good for you guys and congrats on the soon to be built house 😇

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      @@waylonk2453 Wow. Here you need all sorts of licence, approval, permission, tickets, etc. etc. I did it once or twice decades ago but too hard now with all the bureaucratic obstacles.

  • @thecatadors911
    @thecatadors911 Год назад

    Im a electrician in the states and ive been super interested in different ways homes are built by robots. I always assumed a robot could do the framing and blocking, but when it comes to plumbing, electric, hvac applications you need a humans touch. Im curious on how a production robot could build a home with the pumbing and electrical included with the build. A 100% robot built home. And yes, i understand its (probally) very impractical and not very cost effective, but id just love to see how engineers would go about making a fully 100% tobot built home. From the framing to the finishing on the cabinets. Hopefully ill get to see it in my lifetime!

  • @american3690
    @american3690 2 года назад +1

    As a 25yr old Australian, I honestly couldn't give a crap if it puts builders out of the job, I don't want to pay $2million+ for a house

  • @azrmp67
    @azrmp67 3 года назад +4

    Yuck. The houses are so close together! No yards.

  • @glennalexon1530
    @glennalexon1530 3 года назад +7

    Is brick-laying a major part of the cost of the home overall? How much cheaper was the featured house, compared to it's neighbors? Are the large, odd bricks much more expensive than common bricks? How many days would a crew of brick-layers taken to build the same thing? Poor reporting, TB.

    • @TheBeriney
      @TheBeriney 3 года назад +1

      The most expensive cost is the land itself, and after that I believe it’d be the labour costs surely? The materials (especially brick) can’t be that much surely?

    • @KrishnaSharma-nx9dy
      @KrishnaSharma-nx9dy 3 года назад +1

      It not only saves labor costs but also time which is the most expensive thing.

    • @photovideooz4084
      @photovideooz4084 2 года назад

      in Australia a brick layer can earn around 150K per year, an expensive labour job, and the robot don't charge you this money, they just charge electricity 1 robot = 10 brick layer in speed. These giant brick are special made by German brick maker Wienerberger AG.

  • @joshmcdonald9508
    @joshmcdonald9508 2 года назад

    Those Aussies really came through with a winner this time. Holy cow that thing is handy!

  • @jasonclark5484
    @jasonclark5484 3 года назад

    I really like the bits of humor mixed throughout, nicely done.

  • @SecretAgentMan00
    @SecretAgentMan00 3 года назад +3

    Cutting costs but keeping prices the same..... well played

  • @CsehCsaba
    @CsehCsaba 2 года назад +8

    And the robot will build houses for who? For robots? That few ppl will have enough house all over the world..

  • @sharongillesp
    @sharongillesp 2 года назад +2

    Cement block houses rely heavily on air-conditions and heaters.

    • @diegfb2001
      @diegfb2001 2 года назад

      Indeed, I don't think those are "foam concrete" made bricks, but it would be great.

  • @Atanjeo1
    @Atanjeo1 3 года назад +2

    According to good standards this robot delivers bad quality. In the video we see head joints bigger than 1 inch. Seems to be a very bad thermal bridge design due to possible problems with the airtightness. At masonry school you learn that joints should be at least 1/4 inch to permit proper tooling and no more than 1/2 inch to provide adequate strength.

  • @SteveAndAlexBuild
    @SteveAndAlexBuild 3 года назад +5

    Mmmm no perp joints and quarter bond . We would have to knock that down if we built block work like that ! 😳🤯🧱👍🏽

  • @mcrazza
    @mcrazza 3 года назад +10

    This is fascinating technology and IMO an inevitability. Robotic brick laying and the robotisation of construction jobs will become common.
    Sad to see the onward march towards the death of the backyard though. These blocks have bugger all room beyond the front yard. There's hardly any room down the sides too! Even in Tassie we're seeing this.

  • @TheOriginalFreak
    @TheOriginalFreak 3 года назад +2

    What kind of hellish "District 9" neighborhood is that?!?!
    Living my whole life in Wisconsin, that neighborhood is only 1 step from jail/prison in regard to lack of freedom, space, privacy, etc.
    We all need to start having fewer stupid children; save on space and sanity all at once.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      It is the developers maximising the 'product' that is the quantity of house squeezed onto the smallest piece of land. And young marrieds don't know any better or don't care; just want 'new' !

  • @zibbitybibbitybop
    @zibbitybibbitybop 3 года назад +2

    My main question is how well these will hold up in colder weather. Brick houses are obviously fine in cold climates if you build them right, so I'd imagine this would be fine, too, but it's worth asking.

  • @bdawg3942
    @bdawg3942 3 года назад +4

    Please don’t purchase any shares, until my tax return is in my account, so I can load up first!!👍🤣

    • @craigmortell
      @craigmortell 3 года назад +1

      don't worry FBR stock is pretty cheap, us long suffering shareholders have been waiting an age for this to start bringing in revenue. The tech is basically in place, still being refined to work faster etc, but they need to build out a decent fleet of machines and get 'wall as a service' more widely adopted. Two prototype machines they have now are not enough. But if they pull it off this will be huge.

    • @damianbowman
      @damianbowman 3 года назад +1

      These shares will be going through the roof. Im sure you’ve already bought plenty Bdawg👍

    • @bdawg3942
      @bdawg3942 3 года назад

      🙄🤣🤣👍. I gotta mix up my user name up a bit!!🤦‍♂️

    • @bdawg3942
      @bdawg3942 3 года назад +1

      Craig, some off us have been invested for years , since 2015 and have always believed. Our payday is coming!!

    • @rodgerthedoger1843
      @rodgerthedoger1843 3 года назад +1

      dawg, was hoping you loaded up on the 30th with tax loss selling
      I averaged down to try and recoup heavy losses.

  • @williamr.s.5693
    @williamr.s.5693 3 года назад +7

    This is brilliant! One of the benefits of this, too, is that fewer workers will wear their bodies out, since being a bricklayer is quite grueling, especially in the long run.
    Edit: sorry, you said that too :)

  • @MRRookie232
    @MRRookie232 3 года назад +1

    Great idea to create this sister channel! Brilliant content

  • @joelewis1074
    @joelewis1074 2 года назад

    Questions from an American, watching this video.
    1. No one noticed the giant gaps in the vertical spacing between the blocks? How is that not a code violation of some sort? How is that NOT going to affect the insulation quality of the home? Won't the man eating bugs Australia is famous for, find their way in through those holes?
    2.) Having no wall cavity space severely limits the placement of plumbing and wiring. I'd like to see an explanation of how that is addressed.

  • @sergiorivasisla
    @sergiorivasisla 3 года назад +3

    Love the humour 😂

    • @TomorrowsBuild
      @TomorrowsBuild  3 года назад +2

      You're welcome 😉

    • @4doorsmorewhors
      @4doorsmorewhors 3 года назад

      Building a house with no mortar is not humour..............

  • @TheRebelOne.
    @TheRebelOne. 3 года назад +6

    Australian houses are built extremely close to each other. Not a fan of this "closeness"!

  • @dougie1968
    @dougie1968 3 года назад

    No more cowboy builders, wolf whistling and seeing arse cracks. 😆

  • @markbernier8434
    @markbernier8434 3 года назад

    I see this as dead end tech. The obvious end game is prefab where a bigger crane or robot places entire finished walls as single ( or a small number on larger walls) pieces and all the site build does is connections and cosmetic touch ups. You can see that in the video where an entire floor slab was done in one piece.

  • @Withnail1969
    @Withnail1969 3 года назад +4

    Are we trying to pretend that a giant robot building walls is 'green'? How sustainable are the concrete blocks it's using?

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      They are concrete. From a concrete batching plant. You guess !

  • @kenskinner6948
    @kenskinner6948 3 года назад +4

    Absolutely brilliant

    • @bdawg3942
      @bdawg3942 3 года назад +2

      Unfortunately wasted in sleepy Perth at the moment. We need world wide exposure

  • @tkmad7470
    @tkmad7470 Год назад

    This seems like a much better idea than the printing machines.

  • @SwordQuake2
    @SwordQuake2 3 года назад +2

    Houses will still be insanely expensive.

    • @aleksandersuur9475
      @aleksandersuur9475 3 года назад

      It's not really the house that is expensive, if you would be fine with having a house in the middle of nowhere it would be quite cheap. Most people would rather live in a large city, preferably the capital of region/country. So it becomes a competition of who can get the biggest loan.

  • @keeganbrown9967
    @keeganbrown9967 3 года назад +4

    Awesome technology!!! I wouldn't mind having a robot build my home. Although I'd have a couple acres instead of a 50 x 50 lot

  • @Sogartar
    @Sogartar 3 года назад +3

    This presentation is a bit misleading as rough construction is like 40%-50% of the total cost. Labor and material included. This includes the slab and roofing too. I would speculate that the cost savings from this machine are at most a few percent of the total cost.

    • @kkklover89
      @kkklover89 3 года назад

      They didn't mention how much,the building cost as compared to a current one with the same specs. They always lie by omission.

    • @justicedemocrat9357
      @justicedemocrat9357 3 года назад +1

      If I can save 5% on a $500k house that's huge amount of money.

    • @Sogartar
      @Sogartar 3 года назад

      @@justicedemocrat9357 A quick back on the envelope calculation says a bricklayer lays 400 bricks in an 8 hour workday and lets say in the developed world costs 50 USD per hour. A good sized house could be something like 25K bricks. Which brings us to $25K for the task. This machine has to compete with that. It probably does cost something. It looks expensive. A quick search says it costs $1.5M. Construction equipment of that price would cost around $2K-$3K to rent per day. In the video it says that it finished the house in under 4 days.
      I think what is important is the potential for improvement in the future. It is safe to say that for hundreds of years manual bricklaying has not improved much while this new technology can incrementally become much better. The gained knowledge could also have spillover effects into other areas, snowballing other developments.

    • @ekaterinavalinakova2643
      @ekaterinavalinakova2643 3 года назад

      Yes, what is important is potential for the future. And In the future there could be automated construction for interiors to drive costs to build down even more. Construction costs from what I searched up is 61% of price in the United States. Also being able to finish a foundation in a mere 4-5 days also is cost savings. Time is money because construction companies have a lot of fixed costs they have to deal with.

    • @photovideooz4084
      @photovideooz4084 2 года назад

      i think the speed they saved are going to bring down the overall cost, if regulation allows it, this thing can lay bricks in the dark, all weather, 24hr a day.

  • @user-ie4tt1xp7j
    @user-ie4tt1xp7j 3 года назад +1

    _battling housing crisis with detached single-floor houses_
    Amazing idea.

    • @vanhuvanhuvese2738
      @vanhuvanhuvese2738 2 года назад

      PLENTY LAND so its okay there.The issue is skills not space

  • @nedstudios6490
    @nedstudios6490 2 года назад

    Those 80's movies we watched growing up. It wasn't fiction.

  • @abhijithkoundinyagr8834
    @abhijithkoundinyagr8834 3 года назад +10

    notification squad 😎

  • @ksec6631
    @ksec6631 3 года назад +3

    Why cant they automate the outer layer bricks?

    • @OperationDarkside
      @OperationDarkside 3 года назад +1

      Fast innovation in a conservative sector would kill off any market opportunities. And I can imagine, that they wanted to firstly get the core functionality right, before moving on to the "pretty" stuff.

    • @ksec6631
      @ksec6631 3 года назад

      @@OperationDarkside can you explain a bit more about killing off market opportunities?

    • @OperationDarkside
      @OperationDarkside 3 года назад +1

      @@ksec6631 Removing most or all of the human labor in house construction too quickly will spawn opposition from commercial and private entities. A "wow, wow, wow, waaaaiit a moment" kind of situation. While I believe it's possible, you need to give workers the time and opportunity to switch professions, if one dies off. It was the same with Elon Musk wanting to replace all factory workers in the Model 3 factory with robots. He faced major opposition from external and internal. In hindsight with Covid in mind, it would have been the right call, but short-term human workers are cheaper. They could even face legal action from the government trying to prevent mass-joblessness.

    • @ksec6631
      @ksec6631 3 года назад +1

      @@OperationDarkside thx for the detail answer.

    • @jasond3918
      @jasond3918 3 года назад

      There are wire ties that are placed between the leaves of brickwork so I am thinking with that the ties would need to be mechanically fixed to the robots wall as the external face brickwork is laid.
      Face brickwork requires the joints to be either flushed, raked or rolled and I don’t think the robots can do this yet.

  • @aquattadomdren6760
    @aquattadomdren6760 2 года назад +1

    For HVAC automation, it would be good to send two or three briefcase sized bots with several 3’ arms. Have them go through and data mine first to get a layout and check spot rods. Use sensors to keep the bots from breaking anything down there and they can use the arms to pull themselves and brace themselves while pulling lines or duct work. From there, give them two dedicated arms for strapping. Give it various stabilizing legs for multiple positions while optimizing range of motion of the arms. Give it a few guide arms for line sets and you’d probably be set. Simple. Until that expensive bot is invented, the HVAC trade should be pretty safe. With the bots, theoretically you’d have an influx of workers, due to the alleviation of most of the crawl and attic work, which dissuades a lot of people out of a great paying, high demand career.

  • @birdrocket
    @birdrocket 2 года назад +1

    The housing crisis has less to do with the cost/manner of construction and more with the fact that it’s damn near impossible to build anything that isn’t a large single family home. The poor zoning laws and bureaucracy involved in building a dense mixed use development drives costs up, delays projects for years, and leaves us with less housing than we need.

  • @mikelytou
    @mikelytou 3 года назад +3

    From my experience, in construction something ALWAYS gets f..ed up.
    Because we're all humans. We are imperfect. We forget things, our cognitive and physical capabilities can be impaired by sickness, hunger, weather and many more.
    With this construction robot the chance for error is drastically diminished.
    I would definitely prefer this to a handmade house, even if it were more expensive.

    • @linmal2242
      @linmal2242 2 года назад

      The devil is in the detail; so programming and setting up will be the killer, money wise.
      It will shine when there is a big project(s) of continuous application for it.

  • @Max-wo7zp
    @Max-wo7zp 2 года назад +1

    "Real people bought it with real money". yup, that makes sense.

  • @richard9436
    @richard9436 3 года назад

    No mortar , visible gaps, no discussion of reinforcement or structural integrity, no visible insulation or discussion of it. I call those glaring omissions.

  • @rattlinbucks
    @rattlinbucks 3 года назад +2

    The tech needs to focus on roof and floor systems, typically they are the most expensive and time consuming part of a build assembly.

    • @photovideooz4084
      @photovideooz4084 2 года назад

      0:07 roof and floor system isn't a problem because these jobs will be done by human.

  • @caelansmith
    @caelansmith 3 года назад +2

    Australia really needs more duplexes and townhouses rather than single family dwellings

    • @photovideooz4084
      @photovideooz4084 2 года назад +1

      yeah, they just landed contract for building townhouses