Perhaps every house over a certain value should include the cost of printing a home for a homeless person? This video is from our new sister channel. Here's their video on the dancing robots: ruclips.net/video/SiZZkrEyw5Q/видео.html
This kind of technology creates homeless people by stripping skilled labourers of their jobs. Are they supposed to then depend upon charity or the state to provide homes for their families? Give people skills and then give them the opportunity to work, that's what 'homeless' people need, not disruptive technology that removes humans from the equation.
@@PWMoze I've never met a brick layer that enjoys laying bricks, and I've met a few in my rural town. I still think affluent people will want skilled labour so they can have nicer houses than the rest of us and everything you wear and use is a product of industrial revolution that put billions of people and generations out of jobs and into new jobs. We can do it again.
or, and hear me out.... we use the government for its intended purpose and use tax dollars to build new infrastructure and housing. let's quit this neoliberal bullshit while we still can. #TaxTheRich
This idea of stealing the benefits of innovation and risk from the innovator has to be one of the most stupid I’ve heard. It’s a proposal to poison the innovation process at its gestation. If you’ve got to scratch that static Schrooge McDuck itch of the tax and spend goofs, penalise those wasting resources and money by persisting with old, inefficient practices.
This is so amazing, without the need and cost for human labor we are finally now able to Sell Houses To The Homeless People That We Fired In Order To Afford This 3D Printer.
@@ezicarus8216 And he does it for free with socialist unicorns bringing manna from heaven and a health care plan from heaven with robotic 3d printers feeding him and taking care of him. Welcome to the matrix.
@@ezicarus8216 Precisely. It's also much more difficult and time consuming to run mechanical and electrical in finished walls. Might have to resort to having everything surface-mounted, which means $$$ for armoured conduit and the like.
Wow! This is by far the best video I’ve come across covering entire wide applications of 3D printing going on, and with the very recent examples, and logic-supported/ verified details. Thanks a lot Pindex!
3D printing is a bit overhyped - the real impressive technology here is the degree of automation in the construction, not the 3D-printing technique specifically. (plus in most places with no affordable housing the limiting factor is land value rather than construction costs)
Yes. In my personal experience it's simply that the worthwhile jobs/careers are in "cities", places of high density where land costs a fortune, so you must pay high or live poorly if you want work to earn an income. I worked in 4 big cities for 53 years and then bought rural, cheap, 50 miles from any town/city just 20 days after retirement.
I have been following 3d printing houses for years...I am so glad to finally see it hit mainstream and hopefully seeing people in homes that could never afford one before.
It is all a Illusion in a Great Delusion of a Schizophrenic Soul, he is the so called savior of mankind you know jesuschrist real name Roman, the brein behind all the rubbish shit on Pearl Mother Earth the inventor of religion. Become Aware, the AI (19) are here to take your soul and suck you dry so you are out of order! Welcome into the Dimension of the doggies of Tartarus. This intel👆🏽 is non hybrid human!
too utopian. it will improve until some group gripes over it. plus its going to lead to a bunch of new issues.It will be nice for a while. but certain aspects of humanity keep us from enjoying nice things for too long.
homelessness isn't simply a question of money .. a huge chunk is a question of energy .. you have to maintain a house you want to live in.. keep it clean .. take care of it. sure a lot of people simply hit hard financial times .. but many just don't have the energy/will (maybe something like depression, nihilism, alcoholism, ..)
As a person with a spinal cord injury and chronic fatigue, I am extremely thankful for my aids. There is no way I would be able to maintain my living standards otherwise.
@@M33f3r you are a sample of the people which are ment to get support. some serious injury which prevents you from taking care of your lifelyhood onyour own. but the application of the most broad brush possible .. give people money/houses and the problem is solved .. is just naive and void of any common sense. fanatic idealism waiting for the utopia
If Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram promoted "failure" as enthusiastically as "success" then maybe society wouldn't be so imbalanced towards excess profiteering on the backs of decent working people. Our societal morals and ethics are so bankrupted by politicians and their paymasters that this system has evolved to profit them. It was once fine to be poor and proud.
@@brynleytalbot778 yeah it's called humility and it is entirely lost on the average American who is COMPLETELY self adsorbed with the BULLSHIT principal of self worth being defined by how much you own or how much money you make instead of how much you care and do for the people around you. These degenerates didn't learn this in kindergarten what is going to make them change? (yes I'm talking about the OP and the many others who fall in line with their Fox 'News' talking points)
All those problems become minor once rent and mortgage payments are eliminated. People get depressed and drink because the financial situation has them working 2 jobs with barely enough for rent or food.
I'm still skeptical about these 3D printed houses. It looks great and fast to build, even at a way lower cost then normal. But still i need to see how it will stand the test of time. Maybe the house will stand forever, but it can also be a ruïne in a short amount of time. I would not give up your profession just yet, this will take years to perfect. And yes , i know they are doing this for years already. It is still relatively new and they still need to figure out a lot of things. Most ideas are good, but only on paper.
@@stephandevriesere3667 there's an interesting video by a woman called Belinda Carr, with a channel of the same name. She kind of tones down the hype quite a bit, while still seeing potential in this kind of technology. Focused on construction and not "3d printing" in general. To me the worst aspect in this video is how homelessness is kind of seen as a technological and economic problem rather than a fundamentally economic and legal/human rights issue. Some estimates give that there are actually more empty homes than homeless people in the US at least. Pindex is cool and generally good, but it will fall for some questionable hypes like "solar roadways" and/or the "hyperloop."
@@petitio_principii, 100 % agree with you. This tech could solve a whole lot of problems for homeless people anywhere in the world. To bad there are way to many "rich" people and company's that will stop any attemd to use this to solve the housing problems for a fraction of the normal cost. They are to greedy and only want to see more money coming in. As long as the wealthy rich are the ones governments listen to, nothing will be done with this unless they can make lots of money of it.
@@stephandevriesere3667 It's one thing if the government is too stuck up and profit driven to help people in need in this case the homeless but I think you should never forget that the bigger percentile of rich people come from literally nothing. I think whoever proves himself/herself to become competent enough to "succeed" in this day and age should have the right to keep as much of that wealth and also the right to help where it's needed. The Utopia you envision where nobody suffers is almost impossible to create and the only thing that could save the most poor in this world are themselves and/or good leadership by the government and saint-like "rich" people
Dont forget that it is not only the house people can't afford but also the land. My property got assessed at 1 million, however the house was assessed at 50k due to it's age lol.
And that's why any innovation is soon sucked up by increasing land prices. The free market simply doesn't work. The sooner that's acknowledged the sooner the clock turns back to sane housing prices and rents.
@@brynleytalbot778 lmao. free market. you living under a rock lately? Housing prices have been propped up by Quantitative Easing and low rates for decades. those 300k dollar houses would be 120k in a normal market with a normal 4-8% interest rate rather than a 1-2% one.
I was born in 1950. My dad bought 2.5 acres about 45 minutes north of Seattle which at the time was all woods. There was no regulations or permitting. He build a humble hand made house with no mortgage while working as a construction worker and raised 3 kids. All our neighbors lived is humble shacks. Then the suburbs built up around us. The early homesteaders moved on and their small acreages turned into lots with houses. Now we've down zoned the land in an attempt to saves some of it, while increasing the population. The US had 200 million people when my dad bought his property. Now there is 320 million. Up over one third in just my lifetime. When we begin to reach zero population growth, they throw open the boarder to millions of people from large family cultures. You won't be able to print enough houses and if you try you will have 3d printed ghettos. I believe it was tried and refereed to as The Projects. If people don't have skin in the game they will act like people with no skin in the game.
Sadly yes. Containers and mobile homes (vans are already built by robots) are already there since 90's. People keep reproducing. I was born in most polluted region of Europe. Sad place, but because pollution noone wanted to live there. After population boom this place has population density of 200ppl/km! Radioactive, dirty place with acid rains and no hope for cleanup ever, as you got waste all into buildings, trees and just quite much everything. Did it stop people from reproducing? Most still believe some wonder tech or political system will save them, riding straight to abbys and getting children to school, with dumb narcissist pride brlieving chidren can be dumbed down not to see what their parents are building. More propaganda of success please! alcohol! bullshit jobs and hate. Just blame it on immigrants 😅 they actually had to pay extra to import immigrants because no sane person would immigrate there, so their scapegoating line did not hold with only locals 😅 Then You have Chelyabinsk, Magnetogorsk and other proud and dirty cities wchich are becoming memes on their own (like Gary, Detroit and Norilsk)
@@yousefabdelmonem3788 Haha yes, it might sound low compared to capital cities 😅 Forgot to explain it's not even a city. And it is in North - not really place habitable for crowds, as one depends on loads of energy , supplies and nature to just survive winter - it goes on huge ecological debt.
My grandfather purchased his home near Seattle for $30,000 in the early 1970's. It's now valued at over $500,000... the housing market is out of control
This is one area where robotics can do an incredible job to relieve a human-caused problem. Can't wait to drive by a construction site where one of these machines are at work. BRAVO.
Acquisition of developable land is the most expensive part of any property construction. That is down to people who have the money and power to dictate who can and cannot aquire the plot.
Code enforcement, zoning permits and building inspections can cost thousands before you even nail two boards together! And you usually have a finish deadline of two years via the building permit, otherwise you get to start the whole shakedown process all over. No building and improving as you can afford it in this made to fail racket! The system is set up to keep poor people trapped in wage slavery paying tribute to landlords, lenders and tax collectors for decades, until the poor person drops dead.
In Canada last year houses went up 25% in price.... 3D printing houses have the potential to reduce prices significantly... I really hope that this technology becomes widespread quickly
Prices are mostly determined by demand and supply. In Los Angeles, everyone wants to live close to the Bay Area due to economic opportunities. Demand has gone up. But there's no more space to build more houses. Supply has remained the same. This causes prices to rise fast due to demand. The world recently passed the point where more than 50% of the global population now live in cities. So, more people are cramming into smaller areas, competing for housing. Hence why housing prices have gone up significantly. The problem is it a lack of houses. The areas we're trying to all cram into is too small to facilitate that much housing.
@@tylerdurden3722 The goal of Agenda 2030 is to reduce land and allow wilderness and smart cities to create urbanized housing for the masses so they will all live as renters. The goal is to destroy all aspects of production and capitalism so there won't be any energy for food, travel or really anything at all. The goal of Agenda 21 and leaders like Canada's prime minister and Biden is to destroy the economy and private property and consumer markets, to create a world wide destruction of the free world. They will squeeze and squeeze and offer half baked tech solutions that don't work because they cannot be powered by a missing power grid, a missing credit and economic grid and a missing food grid. Corporations and dreamers who produce these wonder gadgets will still try to innovate, but you will hear things like in one POST CARBON institute webcast that things are so much better under Covid because we all learned to live off 10 percent of what we were living off of. But nobody is living and supporting their taxes and house payments on 10 percent of what they were getting pre-covid, it's all funny money bailouts. Without real production you have NO ECONOMY and even the farms are being taken over to create a natural land for wilderness. Which means setting aside resources for countries like China which are producing cities. pouring as much cement in three years actually 40 percent more than the USA poured in 100 years. So capitalistic countries like China will continue to rise with their authoritarian capitalism and NAZI like harvesting of donor organs from their oppressed class and they will pollute 7 times more to produce steel we could have made here in the USA, with no bounds on pollution they will continue to pollute and create far more C02 30 times more than every volcano for three years in the world with C02 output alone. As they do this they will continue to grow a real economy while the US and other five leading nations of the "evil" first world are destroyed by Agenda 2030 plans which are NOT SUSTAINABLE Economically but designed to take away farm land, private property and cram the starving survivors into stacked small rooms in "smart cities" which is a keyword for a controlled population in planned high rise hell like the former Soviet Union or Failed dense population housing in the third world. With Uganda like farming goals of destroying farming to "save the world" from global warming, it's not wonder some hope some kind of robotic housing can be built on the cheap for the drug addicts and poor souls destroyed by their own party spirit or the outsourcing of all jobs to China as we feed, obey and observe the commands from our overlords in China. Some dream of robotic 3d buildings on Mars hoping to get away and 3d printed homes and construction is much like primitive MUD earthen houses, but its' poured via robots. In many countries of the world cement is the worst form of building material. It's even looked down on by Agenda 21 planners seeking to destroy America and capitalism under a guise of false sustainability. Nice technology ideas, but they almost never scale to something that can help people. But with a goal to steal, kill and destroy capitalism all these upstart businesses will be swept away into a sea of unsustainable economic profit as the destruction of the US economy is the key anyway and the goal anyway for Chinese and communist domination. It's cool stuff the tech no doubt, but much of that tech is then used against the masses by the central powers. For example learning about low cement produced compressed earth block was done a lot by the US military as they created houses and complexes in their bases to practice on so they could replicate housing in Iraq. So the Army for example learned a lot about how to make earthen and compressed earth houses, because they needed to develop munitions to shoot through the walls of earthen wall houses in Iraq. So much of the new school technology is just a twist on the old school technology of earth based housing used in the third world. We add a robot instead of making walls out of compressed earth blocks and act as if it's an advantage. By the way they even have compressed earth block building machines that make the blocks which use 10 percent of the cement in a cement block house as less cement is needed when mixed with earth. 10 percent or less cement means a lot less fossil energy is needed to create the same volume of housing. So compressed earth or mixed earth 3d printing might be a cool thing. But then again in America and first world countries the average real estate agent and city assessor likes more traditional housing often being stick framed housing and block houses bring less tax dollars. The high level of taxes and prices of bubble economies for flipping and creating greater value housing to support the central planners or local planner government is also an issue. If you make housing to cheap, they won't be able to tax it and the political push back can be immense. And much of the cool stuff we see from alternative housing livestyles is cool but the embedded energy and large footprint of those structures can't always scale to meet the needs of denser city populations the average earth ship house costs a TON Of money but tries to save on energy efficiency from solar gains. And the average home or self sufficient crop farmer with biofuels, gardening, crops for animals food and energy for their lifestyle is unsustainable via PEAK OIL theory which of course has been proven to be a false energy crisis as well, but much wisdom is piece together in small pieces as they act as if they don't have a plan and are doing things in different approaches. . . I don't condemn all the approaches, but the overall plan is often hidden it's agenda 2030 based on a 1000 page plan which requires the destruction of the capitalistic world and the destruction of farming and capitalism without any alternative system that can work. So this is NOT A SLAM on the GOOD INNOVATION they are trying to do here, it's just a quick warning to tell you these solutions are not perfect nor necessarily based on a solution that is well thought out. You still need raw materials, work, and energy and wealth to make this work. The overall problem is the far right and far left almost have the same goal for the average person.
My family is, right now, building a large shed. Creating the outer shell of a building is actually fairly easy-- not cheep, but not disgustingly expensive. It's the sewage/cesspool access, electricity, and water access that are our limiting factors.
@@dcohn99 You mean the permits and nonsense that prevent your next-door neighbors from setting up an open cesspool and a tinderbox right next to your property line?
...and vast energy and plumbing and electrical and roofing and flooring and cabinetry and drywall and painting and septic and water and civil work and driveway...
The idea is, if Biden’s $200 billion housing project uses this technology, everyone will have a home, thus reducing the prices of the things people need and thus effectively giving even people on $7.25/hour a massive effective pay increase.
I'm sick of people acting like removing the labour cost of housing will make housing affordable . There's very little material and labour cost in a house. Avarage house is 60k labour and materials the rest is developer profits . Removing the labour cost just means more developer profits and less jobs the workers 😡 I still won't be able to attend a house I allso won't be able to build them for others to get food.
@@avancalledrupert5130 I hear you man, but it depends who’s in charge of the housing market, doesn’t it? If resources allocation is handled between the State and housing developers (both of whom are quite often self-serving parasites), you can bet that prices will hike on. If resource allocation is designated to a benevolent & impartial AI, without such self-serving impulses, then this might be the greatest thing you’ve seen in the last 40 years!
4:42 hold on a sec. Overwhelming majority of homeless people are men. California - the most woke socialist state has around the same number of homeless people as the rest of them combined. And you say it's because of DOMESTIC VIOLENCE or BANKRUPTCY? No. In all of those cases the reason can be summarized in just one word THE LEFT. Morally elevated idiots of no known knowledge of anything practical living a 170 years old dream. Houses are too expensive? Obviously! Millions are flooding in from Latin America. What would you expect? And no. A house IS NOT build in 2 days for half the price. Construction, which this idea is so about is a least cost, time, effort consuming stage. The WHOLE rest is done by hand.
So you got to love how they casually leave out all the other things required to actually have a live in house.Like electrical, plumbing,windows and much more.
Well if you’re only earning $3 a day, then you’re probably also on government assistance receiving unemployment checks or other checks that can cover electrical, water, and other bills.
@@dinomightstudios4119 ....He’s not talking about how to pay the bills,,,,,, He’s saying that the house wiring, plumbing, windows, doors, heat & A/C..... all missing from the video.
@@boomstick4054 Oh, but didn't you hear? These will use passive heating/cooling. No need for all those expensive "luxuries". The people "living" in them won't have money for "utilities", because they wont have jobs. These are essentially glorified stone huts. What this video really overlooks is the environmental impact of mass producing "soil based material". Vast amounts of "soil", even if "locally sourced", means massive digging sites. Where is all this "soil" going to come from? How much natural area will have to be sacrificed to make all this? According to www.davidmoore.org.uk/21st_Century_Guidebook_to_Fungi_PLATINUM/Ch01_03.htm#:~:text=Only%20about%207.5%25%20of%20the,centres%2C%20land%20fills%2C%20etc. , only 7.5% of Earth's surface is covered in "soil", and a growing population will need all of it for food production. This site has an even grimmer picture. www.earthsciweek.org/classroom-activities/how-much-soil-there "The last section (1/32nd or 3 percent of the apple) represents the area of the world developed by humans. Now, carefully peel the last 1/32nd section. This small bit of peel represents the portion of our planet that is soil on which humans depend for food production and similar uses. So, like water and air, soil is a very important and limited natural resource." Just saying.
@@dinomightstudios4119 Why not using those guys which cannot afford the house as work force to their future homes. In the end the printer is using more or less the same materials. The houses are not affordable because of high cost with labors? Then you have the solution. Don't teach people to be lazy, I think:D.
Nice walls. Now install the windows, electrical, plumbing pipes and showers, sinks, toilets, HVAC, appliances, roofing, insulation, counters, cabinets, finishings, flooring, carpets, doors, tiles, trim, etc. And paint it all. 🎨
Hi, really love the content you guys put out. What I'd really appreciate though, would be a more extensive list of sources. While I'm quite happy to take your word for it on most matters, I'd feel a lot more comfortable recommending your videos to friends and family, if your claims were backed up with sources more often. Also, I'd sometimes like to read more on specifics you present but don't go into that much.
I wonder how these 3D printed houses handle earthquake forces compared to traditional buildings? I'd be very interested to see the results of that as I reckon you could print a very sustainable quake proof house way quicker and cheaper than currently possible.
Future kids will be plugged into the A.I. mainframe, they'll no longer be thinking for themselves and the A.I. won't want the kids learning about the days when people thought for themselves and then screwed over the later generations... Oooh, they're already connected.
@@reggiep75 There'll never ben an AI mainframe. There'll never be AI. True AI would be worthless to us or anyone else. Kids will be plugged into a network, though, one full of distributed-computing nodes that use video games to get kids to process data for free.
Yo anyone else notice that some of these 3d printed houses look just like the houses on the Flintstones? That one shot looked like bedrock the city from the show
Yeah it's the fact that industry is becoming robotic and all this is not about helping homelessness this is pushing human out of the work force no middle class no unions 9 to 5's tougher to make a living.
@@michaelstreeter3125 it would be a society where everyone has a house, everyone has enough food to eat for starters We have enough food on this earth to feed every single person, we have enough houses to house everybody- it is just not seen as profitable to do so
@@michaelstreeter3125 For sake of argument i assume you know some of the horror stories of US health (un)care system, where you can go broke just because you have some complicated health issues, now imagine a system where you do not go broke under similar conditions, and this will scale throughout much of
I met a Mexican guy who lived in a tent in a homeless area to save money to buy a place to live. The place was really crappy and considered to be an impoverished area. So I was able to bring in food trucks. Almost everyone was Hispanic and really nice. It helped that I learned to speak Spanish
He's on topic. He exposes one additional reason for homelessness. And the primary causes - Affordability and utilities. You can't afford to save if you're paying property taxes and utilities. It's a perpetual state enforced on the low paid.
Land prices are the issue, not necessarily the construction cost though this helps. Land prices are artificially inflated & controlled via those that profit off of this situation.
"Depend on the government", you're kidding, right? Government is just the place where power is organised, the interface between the powerful, and the sections of the population hired to protect the powerful, like police etc, and protect and project their power, like military and intelligence agencies. That's why we have things like "rights", we fought their wars, but when they don't even need people to build bigger and bigger prisons, and machines that never get tired and cannot be bribed guard them, there'll be no need for a government that you can depend on. The power hungry are never kind to the people they have no need for.
This will be really good - only needs a few economic migrants, vaxxed out of their mind's and into dull submission to push buttons for pennies. (That's after they have buried all those that died of vaxxinations!!!). The WEF elite and their slave survivors; to act as maintenance men. The are saving the planet - but not the inhabitants. Wakey wakey folks - they ain't doing this for you!
This. Things are worth whatever supply/demand dictates and whatever the perceived utility value of that thing is. This will ultimately just make housing developers more profitable.
@@ezicarus8216 When? You ask as if education begins and ends on exact points in time. I never stop learning. Can you explain how supply and demand is a fallacy? In my city, house prices are skyrocketing recently, because the demand is outstripping the supply. That's no fallacy.
Labour costs, plant costs, manufacturing costs and more are all deduced massively from this type of production. The material itself doesn't even need to be made in a factory! It also would produce houses faster, flooding the market and making your average house cheaper thanks to lowering demand. M+E, roof and substruct might still be the same price but you've eliminated almost every other cost. Your comment is short sited at best.
When you lose your job for whatever reason, you find another. Im 55 and Ive had to do it more times than I can count. Noone bailed out the pony express riders or the telegraph operators
I really like the idea of using bio-waste from agriculture to build homes/huts and it's natural insulation properties, here in Canada a lot of polutions comes from using fuel to keep us warm in winter. It would be great for building cottages off the grid, and sheds in people's backyards as opposed to buying the current plastic or metal sheds that end up in landfill. Printing furniture and more with all the plastic waste we produce, would really help because right now most plastic end up in the garbage.
Unfortunately plastic and many organic products are not used in buildings because they either burn too easily or give off fumes that kill when they burn. They are cheap and would be used everywhere if they were safe
And there goes the “trades” right out working mans door and right into the unemployment office. I have been following this 3D house building innovation from the beginning. Now I see a complete house built by a robot operated by one or two unskilled laborers in 24 hours this is the ultimate end of building trades jobs. I guess it’s all about modernization
I used to think same thing but now we can't find any construction workers so i am thinking we kinda need this type of thing. Of course, I have the benefit of living in the future and addressing a comment made in a much different world of mid 2021. When the labor crunch hit, i felt like a fool for not anticipating it because i knew that after the Black death the plague made a tour of Europe, peasants had bargaining power for like the first time in centuries. Why? because so many had died that the ruling class had no choice but to pay almost a living wage. And peasants had options. A neighboring lord would protect and value a good worker, welcoming if they decided to leave their lord. But me, my lord treated me fairly well when my life fell apart during the worst of this disaster. And now that my money is worth 20% less than what it was a few years ago, i got a raise to almost cover that (of course the govt says it's only like 8% inflation but other than my mortgage, anything i go buy is 20% to 100% more expensive than it was a year or two ago.. Literally anything. I can't think of a single good that hasn't increased by at least 25%. Services have as well....)
A little over 10 years ago all we had were flip phones starting to becomes smart. Technologies growth looks exponential to any person who observes the advancements over the last couple decades. It's scary to think what things will be like 10 years from now especially with this new level of control of the masses that's being implemented.
But it's slowed. We're reaching the limits of what we can physucally build for microchips AT THE ATOMIC SCALE. Because once we get down to silica only a few atoms thick, it doesn't work anymore. Moore's law has slowed more and more. But we were still getting faster chips for less money, but they weren't twice as fast as before, and they weren't half as much. Now, the price has actually been INCREASING for comparable chips or slightly better chips. Their cost isn't increasing as fast as inflation, but it's still an issue. Until we hit a BIG break and there are two ont he horizon that are inevitable: nano tech/nanobots for building all the components other than the chips, making all the other stuff really small, and 2) quantum computers. Once we can have quantum computers at room temp (or even with conventional refrigerators and not like liquid nitrogen) size won't matter so much. and then, a little futher out, is the End Game. Out last invention the last thing we'll ever make: a thing maker, MAKER. General Intelligence AI, Super intelligent General Ai? Whatever it is, a computer that's smart enough to make a better version of itself. Which will of course make an even better version. And then... i think you see where that leads. It's the last thing we'll ever make for two reasons. One ggood and one really really bad: The good reason is taht we won't NEED to make anything ever again because the thing-maker maker will be making (inventing, prototyping, refining, then manufacturing) all the things and doing it better, faster, cheaper. So we can just chill. But we can't chill for long! Becuase of the bad reason! it iwll destroy us!
compare a team of people to a machine which was built to do exactly what is measured in the competition isn't a competition .. let anything be in the way, uneven floor, low quality material, something that forces to change the planned structure to be slightly different .. and the machine will be in serious troubble. if everything goes as planned .. it will be totaly out of competition
Except all the construction workers who will be laid off. Maybe they can move into one of those 3D printed homeless shelters? Lack of house is a tiny component of the problem.
We've had the technology to build affordable housing for everyone for decades. The Soviet Union did it half a century ago. The problem is that houses are a free market commodity and we, the people have been deliberately driving up prices. The last time housing prices dropped was 2008 and the government scrambled to force them back up to protect the wealth of banks and the super rich. It will never be economically viable to build affordable housing until we fundamentally change how the economy works.
It has a lot of positive potential. Especially if they find a way to recycle cheaply. But I can also imagine 3d printed mansions becoming a new status symbol for the spoiled rich, instead of being used to house the poor.
I like how they were talking about how homeless people don't have a job to afford housing. Then later in the video talked about 3D printing housing will eliminate 70% of housing labor force. 👍
This kind of technology creates more problems than it solves, it strips people from their jobs and makes them surplus to needs. Then it creates wealth for only those wealthy enough to invest in its development and profitable use. Disruptive technology is a threat not a solution.
You are being naive. If you were employed in the construction industry or associated services this video would be like a looming redundancy notice. It wont solve homelessness if it creates unemployment. Big Tech innovations seem to only benefit the wealthy in the long run, while the jobless and poor it creates have to depend upon charity or the state. Stick the homeless in a pod while the rich extend their lives with the surgical use of printed organs! Its a recipe for misery.
@@jarofspanners3523 No, you are naive if you think you can stop the development of new technology, a Luddite if ever there was one. There have to be political changes to accompany the technological changes that are going to come whether you like it or not, and that is what we need to fight for, not ”burn the machines”. Also, I hope you don’t work a JCB, it put loads of people out of work that just used spades...
My dream is to live in the Yorkshire countryside like my family did for centuries before the WW1. As a young man I can only hope 3D printing is available in the UK in the next few years maybe making it possible for me to own a piece of Yorkshire where I can own a house, instead of the depressing reality of renting for years and years or getting a loan/mortgage for a house I can barely afford.
@@pcuimac i was thinking the exact thing.. reducing the need of construction workers by up to 70%. So, creating homes, for the homeless, and for the people made homeless, lmao.
I see concrete made with nuclear reactor-based power as the way to get around the stated problems they were saying of having too much fossil fuel based power in making concrete. Alternatively, to make the structure less porous, use the direct metal laser sintering robots to make the houses out of stainless steel on the outside to better protect against water damage.
Evan Nibbe And a 1,000 year toxic problem from not using fossil fuels. It's pure insanity to think that anything resulting in something with vast destructive potential should the detritus escape is a solution. Look at Chernobyl and Fukushima to see the folly of nuclear power. It's a reduction in our global polluting footprint that's required and only consuming less power will solve that but that means reducing economic growth and lifestyles to accomplish it, something that's unacceptable to the free market system. Innovations often just promote maintaining current philosophies to perpetuate the system that's not working to try and make it appear to be working. A fools paradise.
I understood that we have plenty of housing, and housing is expensive because people with money accumulate it to up sell or rent, which artificially drives up rent and home prices. I'd like to see rent and mortgages capped at a reasonable percentage of household income. If you want to rent or sell to someone you must offer something within their cap. We'd have to do it gently, but it could end the practice of hoarding land and housing to jack up the prices and turn wealth into more wealth.
but that is how the rentier class makes money. they wont part with the goose with the golden eggs willingly. it will require the use of force. it always has, historically.
I think the better way to stop the hoarding of land is to impose a progressive property tax where you have to pay say $1*(value of all land you own)*atan(ln(value of all land you own)/1000)/pi. This means that it suddenly makes sense for landlords to divide up and sell their units to their tenants (potentially for mortgages which have a monthly interest equal to what the rent would be) in order to decrease the total tax liability of everyone even if the total value of the property remains the same. This way, when those owners go to develop the property they just bought with additional units, they can now sell those additional units under similar terms, and as an area becomes more desirable, the profits from these sales can be distributed to more people!
Imagine they started making houses underground, utilizing mirrors for sunlight (I'm sure theirs better ways) and above ground imagery to mimick windows, maybe along with speakers to hear the outside world. Fire escapes and an elevator for furniture and one for people, to put furniture onto the ground floor you're living in, to make it easier to move in. A vent system to have fresh air from above constantly flowing in aswell. It'd make living so much easier. Almost like an underground apartment. It'd mean we an rid houses on the ground level and then leave room for trees and even parks and trails and possibly MORE!
This is truly a huge step forward and the technology is amazing. Part of the problem they will run into is the cost of the land. My house according to Zillow is worth over $500,000, but my opinion is it shouldn't cost anything more than $80,000 mainly due to the land. Next issue is how will the companies exploit this for much more financial gain than the original concept here to make things better for humanity
This is all great, if we can also find work or welfare for those put out of work as a result. No point reducing costs by 70% if you create 70% more out of work labourers.
Yes there is a point! If we can save massive amounts of money on housing for everyone, we can put them to work with the money going to such things as college or trade school scholarships, as well as investing into cool new industries they can work in.
@@evannibbe9375 ...but why does no-one welcome the answer to the problem of unrestrained population explosion rather than just joining-in by asserting 'It's just instinct'..? Instinct is watching male pigeons in a city start flirting with the nearest female pigeon...male humans are little different - except that female humans aren't as preoccupied with food as are female pigeons. The solution is all male humans staying totally celibate until the one, eternally right, true love female is unexpectedly encountered (with his never looking for her but focusing on uniquely advancing all life forms as his priority as should be her priority in life rather than looking for a child/house/income provider) - and - as there is only ever one right boy for every girl and one right girl for every boy, folk may gradually start to abide by that comment from the famous western writer Louis L'Amour: "Why get married just because everyone else does..?" - and I wonder how ridiculing responses to this are going to 'fit into current human social reality'...
It’s funny how the building made by the company called Wasp was the one that reminded me most of wasps nests. No just the way it looks but the fact that it was made from plant pulp just like how wasps used chewed up plant material to make their hanging nests.
I'm confused, this video is from a different channe right - I remember watching some of this content reccomended in the last episode on Pindex? Are you guys working on another Stephen Fry narrated episode?
@@davidpereira9058 I mean I suppose that's fair. But lots of channels do a one-off video where it's literally just a video of a sister channel or not-main channel. It really shouldn't confuse you... but then again, as XKCD suggests, maybe you're just one of the 10 000 today. This channel just wanted to promote their sister channel and uploaded one of their videos to the main channel.
@@tiaxanderson9725 I'm not really on that RUclips drip tbh, so not so common in my view... 50 secs would have been way too late especially after seeing content already promoted on the same channel. We're all different, but hopefully the feedback gets the channel thinking about how to keep an audience interested instead of assuming there isn't much else that the channel has to offer, like in my case .. Happy Easter. 🙂
And all that ppl, which work like a builders... where they will get 3$ daily if their will be without job :D There will lost too much ppl job in early future... I have no clue, what we will do with that.
13:10 heart cells will contract rythmicly if you just add glucose, it is the syncing up of those cells that is the real issue, not the how to make it beat itself.
The sad thing is in The US we already have enough houses for people to live in but because it won’t bring anyone a profit. Homeless people don’t have that right so the houses just lay vacant.
in the netherlands we have more than enough houses for everyone but young people cant move out of their parents houses because the rents in the cities are too high and nobody is selling because the prices go up 10% every year. so the market has 0 liquidity. even though there are like a million vacant houses in the country.
Are you personally prepared to relinquish your resources so some stranger can have an imaginary "right"? If everyone had a right to a residence, what would stop people from trashing a place and moving on to the next place? They'd set up a burn barrel in the living room and take out all the windows and copper wire to sell them.
@@timhofstetter5654 having a right to 1 free residence doesnt mean you get to trash it and move on. they would have to live in it after they trash it. if people want to live in trash, no one can stop them. but we can give them 1 chance to do better. and a tiny house or trailer only costs a couple thousand bucks. its literally cheaper to give homeless people small housing than to make them sleep on the street where they will steal, do drugs, get sick, etc. hospitals and law enforcement cost more than housing does.
@@TheSuperappelflap so today people make a mistake for whatever reason which tenders them homeless. So you say it's heartless to let them be homeless and we need to give them 1 free house. If they screw it up that's their problem and they're homeless again. People will call you heartless because it's so cheap to just print them another house. See the slippery slope? Someone will always have a bigger heart and be willing to give someone more no matter if you think they deserve it or not. It's not their money they are giving away. Its the community which they believe has a responsibility to take care of everyone no matter how much they have messed up in the past. They only need one more chance and a little more help and they will fix their lives. After all, it's cheaper to give them something than to force them to do without. The question isn't what you think is reasonable to sacrifice to help someone, but what society thinks is reasonable to force you to sacrifice to help others. Eventually, you run out of other people's money.
Nothing will literally ever replace ceramics nor concrete in for the same application, I am astounded everytime I hear this. If we want to not use concrete, will use built-in drills to secure structures, and-or pre-fab stilt structures.
I'll be partykiller here. This tech is beautiful. But if we don't evolve the rules of our society, people working in building will just loose their jobs, while the owners of these bots will get richer. Tech alone can't save us from capitalism. Dreaming is good and all, but if we want to live the dream, we also need to work on the core problem.
We need to be “saved from capitalism”!? You’ve got to be one of those “non-deplorables” produced by a university education. Only universities produce such mindless ignorance and stupidity.
@@gunglegeorge7213 You call me stupid and ignorant, yet you didn't even try to find one argument. By the way, since I'm ignorant (and not from the US), would be so kind as to explain this "non deplorable" and "university" hatred thing ?
@@TheSuperappelflap That's only part of the solution. I takes from the owners, that's a good first step, but it doesn't give any solution to the jobless. And I think it is hard to enforce. Just one exemple. Human workers' condition already get neglected at Amazon and regulation doesn't really manage to strike Jeff Besos. We also have to improve the structures that enforce work laws.
Where do they install the electrical wiring or pipes? Is it inside the wall or do they install it on the outside surface of the wall after everything has been printed/built?
@Naymul Islam not the OP but I think I get what he's referring to. In my country there's a huge incentive to keep housing supply low and costs high because a lot of people make a lot of money out of property and even for those with just one house, a loss of property value is a vote loser. We've had the technology to build more houses for a long time but it didn't happen anyway. However this video highlights other benefits to this technology so its still cool.
@Naymul Islam Yes it helps but to end the problem or at least make it so small and insignificant you have to fight the route causes. (wich are a bad health care system. barrely any worker protection, very expencive education, etc)
Yo two of your examples (expensive health care and education) are literally technological and will one day be solved with technology. The problem the video outlines is houses being expensive and this makes houses cheaper. What's the beef
@@garethhobday3601 ÄÄÄMM I live with cheap healthcare and pricy houses can be solved just look for Vienna. The housing prices are low becouse the comune goverment (city goverment) owns most houses and rent is pretty cheap. Those problems can surely be solved by technology but Patents make most things even Insulin (wich can cheaply be massproduced) very expencive So Yes tech can solve those problems but waiting until this happens doesn´t excuses doing nothing until it becomes feasebul. And Healthcare that is expencive is a problem that cannot be solved with technology but has to be solved with policies that must shatter monopolys and price contol by companies. Even the drug that can heal everything and can be mass produced cheaply doesn´t help anyone if no one can pay for it Sorry for the long text
Perhaps every house over a certain value should include the cost of printing a home for a homeless person?
This video is from our new sister channel. Here's their video on the dancing robots: ruclips.net/video/SiZZkrEyw5Q/видео.html
I miss Fry’s voice.
This kind of technology creates homeless people by stripping skilled labourers of their jobs. Are they supposed to then depend upon charity or the state to provide homes for their families? Give people skills and then give them the opportunity to work, that's what 'homeless' people need, not disruptive technology that removes humans from the equation.
@@PWMoze I've never met a brick layer that enjoys laying bricks, and I've met a few in my rural town. I still think affluent people will want skilled labour so they can have nicer houses than the rest of us and everything you wear and use is a product of industrial revolution that put billions of people and generations out of jobs and into new jobs. We can do it again.
or, and hear me out.... we use the government for its intended purpose and use tax dollars to build new infrastructure and housing. let's quit this neoliberal bullshit while we still can. #TaxTheRich
This idea of stealing the benefits of innovation and risk from the innovator has to be one of the most stupid I’ve heard. It’s a proposal to poison the innovation process at its gestation.
If you’ve got to scratch that static Schrooge McDuck itch of the tax and spend goofs, penalise those wasting resources and money by persisting with old, inefficient practices.
This is so amazing, without the need and cost for human labor we are finally now able to Sell Houses To The Homeless People That We Fired In Order To Afford This 3D Printer.
I want to know how they handle wiring, plumbing, and ventilation in those 3D printed houses.
A human comes in and does the complex work
@@ezicarus8216 And he does it for free with socialist unicorns bringing manna from heaven and a health care plan from heaven with robotic 3d printers feeding him and taking care of him. Welcome to the matrix.
@@ezicarus8216 Precisely. It's also much more difficult and time consuming to run mechanical and electrical in finished walls. Might have to resort to having everything surface-mounted, which means $$$ for armoured conduit and the like.
Chased into the floors and wall by manual labour.
You just watched a video of a robot extruding material. It never occurred to (any of) you that your concerns are pre-programmed?
Australia needs this! I’ve been working 7 days a week 12-14 hr days for about 20 years and I still can’t afford a home 😢
If you invest in real estate in Nigeria,Africa, youll have luxurious home here. Its possible because of exchange rate.
@@graceo9825 Australia is far too expensive, I have been considering leaving if I have to but I’m not giving up just yet.
Buy a tent!
@@time2kickarse ...then move to San Francisco.
@@jntj3007 lol your tent will fit right in the streets of San Francisco.
Wow! This is by far the best video I’ve come across covering entire wide applications of 3D printing going on, and with the very recent examples, and logic-supported/ verified details. Thanks a lot Pindex!
3D printing is a bit overhyped - the real impressive technology here is the degree of automation in the construction, not the 3D-printing technique specifically.
(plus in most places with no affordable housing the limiting factor is land value rather than construction costs)
no in most places the limiting factor is bureaucracy and corruption rather than land value or construction costs.
George Carlin had the answer --GOLF COURSES!!
@@TheSuperappelflap no its land cost and zoning
Yes. In my personal experience it's simply that the worthwhile jobs/careers are in "cities", places of high density where land costs a fortune, so you must pay high or live poorly if you want work to earn an income. I worked in 4 big cities for 53 years and then bought rural, cheap, 50 miles from any town/city just 20 days after retirement.
@@ezicarus8216 no he didn't. He blamed corruption and red tape, not the actual land value in areas not reserved for factories.
I have been following 3d printing houses for years...I am so glad to finally see it hit mainstream and hopefully seeing people in homes that could never afford one before.
You must be kidding, this is going to create more poor people, not provide homes for them.
I get it.. but its going to eliminate hundreds of thousands of jobs
You will own nothing and be happy 😊
It is all a Illusion in a Great Delusion of a Schizophrenic Soul, he is the so called savior of mankind you know jesuschrist real name Roman, the brein behind all the rubbish shit on Pearl Mother Earth the inventor of religion.
Become Aware, the AI (19) are here to take your soul and suck you dry so you are out of order!
Welcome into the Dimension of the doggies of Tartarus.
This intel👆🏽 is non hybrid human!
Have you ever heard of the first rule of real estate?
LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION
Homes are cheap to build.
Humanity restored. Been really hard for all of us, I'm glad during the worse times, the good work is still being done.
Amen
too utopian. it will improve until some group gripes over it. plus its going to lead to a bunch of new issues.It will be nice for a while. but certain aspects of humanity keep us from enjoying nice things for too long.
homelessness isn't simply a question of money ..
a huge chunk is a question of energy .. you have to maintain a house you want to live in.. keep it clean .. take care of it.
sure a lot of people simply hit hard financial times .. but many just don't have the energy/will (maybe something like depression, nihilism, alcoholism, ..)
As a person with a spinal cord injury and chronic fatigue, I am extremely thankful for my aids. There is no way I would be able to maintain my living standards otherwise.
@@M33f3r you are a sample of the people which are ment to get support. some serious injury which prevents you from taking care of your lifelyhood onyour own.
but the application of the most broad brush possible .. give people money/houses and the problem is solved .. is just naive and void of any common sense. fanatic idealism waiting for the utopia
If Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram promoted "failure" as enthusiastically as "success" then maybe society wouldn't be so imbalanced towards excess profiteering on the backs of decent working people. Our societal morals and ethics are so bankrupted by politicians and their paymasters that this system has evolved to profit them. It was once fine to be poor and proud.
@@brynleytalbot778 yeah it's called humility and it is entirely lost on the average American who is COMPLETELY self adsorbed with the BULLSHIT principal of self worth being defined by how much you own or how much money you make instead of how much you care and do for the people around you. These degenerates didn't learn this in kindergarten what is going to make them change? (yes I'm talking about the OP and the many others who fall in line with their Fox 'News' talking points)
All those problems become minor once rent and mortgage payments are eliminated. People get depressed and drink because the financial situation has them working 2 jobs with barely enough for rent or food.
I've been building for 27 years. My profession is going to change with this development
That robot might be the big bad wolf, but the smart pig built with brick.
I'm still skeptical about these 3D printed houses. It looks great and fast to build, even at a way lower cost then normal. But still i need to see how it will stand the test of time. Maybe the house will stand forever, but it can also be a ruïne in a short amount of time. I would not give up your profession just yet, this will take years to perfect. And yes , i know they are doing this for years already. It is still relatively new and they still need to figure out a lot of things. Most ideas are good, but only on paper.
@@stephandevriesere3667 there's an interesting video by a woman called Belinda Carr, with a channel of the same name. She kind of tones down the hype quite a bit, while still seeing potential in this kind of technology. Focused on construction and not "3d printing" in general. To me the worst aspect in this video is how homelessness is kind of seen as a technological and economic problem rather than a fundamentally economic and legal/human rights issue. Some estimates give that there are actually more empty homes than homeless people in the US at least. Pindex is cool and generally good, but it will fall for some questionable hypes like "solar roadways" and/or the "hyperloop."
@@petitio_principii, 100 % agree with you. This tech could solve a whole lot of problems for homeless people anywhere in the world. To bad there are way to many "rich" people and company's that will stop any attemd to use this to solve the housing problems for a fraction of the normal cost. They are to greedy and only want to see more money coming in. As long as the wealthy rich are the ones governments listen to, nothing will be done with this unless they can make lots of money of it.
@@stephandevriesere3667 It's one thing if the government is too stuck up and profit driven to help people in need in this case the homeless but I think you should never forget that the bigger percentile of rich people come from literally nothing. I think whoever proves himself/herself to become competent enough to "succeed" in this day and age should have the right to keep as much of that wealth and also the right to help where it's needed. The Utopia you envision where nobody suffers is almost impossible to create and the only thing that could save the most poor in this world are themselves and/or good leadership by the government and saint-like "rich" people
Dont forget that it is not only the house people can't afford but also the land. My property got assessed at 1 million, however the house was assessed at 50k due to it's age lol.
And that's why any innovation is soon sucked up by increasing land prices. The free market simply doesn't work. The sooner that's acknowledged the sooner the clock turns back to sane housing prices and rents.
Ownership of land,
is soon to become worthless.
The mass majority,
will have control of it's use.
!! Mega Structure: Land Isolation
Get ready for 10 storey skinny homes. I hope there is an elevator.
Maybe they can also start 3D printing lots to go with the printed house.
@@brynleytalbot778 lmao. free market. you living under a rock lately? Housing prices have been propped up by Quantitative Easing and low rates for decades.
those 300k dollar houses would be 120k in a normal market with a normal 4-8% interest rate rather than a 1-2% one.
I was born in 1950. My dad bought 2.5 acres about 45 minutes north of Seattle which at the time was all woods. There was no regulations or permitting. He build a humble hand made house with no mortgage while working as a construction worker and raised 3 kids. All our neighbors lived is humble shacks. Then the suburbs built up around us. The early homesteaders moved on and their small acreages turned into lots with houses. Now we've down zoned the land in an attempt to saves some of it, while increasing the population. The US had 200 million people when my dad bought his property. Now there is 320 million. Up over one third in just my lifetime. When we begin to reach zero population growth, they throw open the boarder to millions of people from large family cultures. You won't be able to print enough houses and if you try you will have 3d printed ghettos. I believe it was tried and refereed to as The Projects. If people don't have skin in the game they will act like people with no skin in the game.
Sadly yes. Containers and mobile homes (vans are already built by robots) are already there since 90's.
People keep reproducing.
I was born in most polluted region of Europe. Sad place, but because pollution noone wanted to live there. After population boom this place has population density of 200ppl/km! Radioactive, dirty place with acid rains and no hope for cleanup ever, as you got waste all into buildings, trees and just quite much everything. Did it stop people from reproducing? Most still believe some wonder tech or political system will save them, riding straight to abbys and getting children to school, with dumb narcissist pride brlieving chidren can be dumbed down not to see what their parents are building.
More propaganda of success please! alcohol! bullshit jobs and hate. Just blame it on immigrants 😅 they actually had to pay extra to import immigrants because no sane person would immigrate there, so their scapegoating line did not hold with only locals 😅
Then You have Chelyabinsk, Magnetogorsk and other proud and dirty cities wchich are becoming memes on their own (like Gary, Detroit and Norilsk)
@@piotrcurious1131 cairo is 17k per km, try that
@@yousefabdelmonem3788 Haha yes, it might sound low compared to capital cities 😅 Forgot to explain it's not even a city. And it is in North - not really place habitable for crowds, as one depends on loads of energy , supplies and nature to just survive winter - it goes on huge ecological debt.
My grandfather purchased his home near Seattle for $30,000 in the early 1970's. It's now valued at over $500,000... the housing market is out of control
Whatcom county
This is one area where robotics can do an incredible job to relieve a human-caused problem. Can't wait to drive by a construction site where one of these machines are at work. BRAVO.
What an incredibly well done video! Was trying to find more info in that.
All we need now is to print cheap building lots.
What r u doing here lol!!! To the moon!!!
@matt Wallace
What r u doing here !!! To the moon!!!
Yup, I really want a 3D printed house and have for a while!! 👍🏻😃
Acquisition of developable land is the most expensive part of any property construction. That is down to people who have the money and power to dictate who can and cannot aquire the plot.
Code enforcement, zoning permits and building inspections can cost thousands before you even nail two boards together! And you usually have a finish deadline of two years via the building permit, otherwise you get to start the whole shakedown process all over. No building and improving as you can afford it in this made to fail racket! The system is set up to keep poor people trapped in wage slavery paying tribute to landlords, lenders and tax collectors for decades, until the poor person drops dead.
land is quite cheap in many rural areas. you are just picky in terms of location.
Both fascinating and a little scary depending on who uses this technology and for what purpose
@just another human bingo!
Why is it scary .?
@@rauljrlara9994 that working class start become useless for some people... vaccine
think you need a 3D brain printing!
In Canada last year houses went up 25% in price.... 3D printing houses have the potential to reduce prices significantly... I really hope that this technology becomes widespread quickly
Prices for land in Canada skyrocketed also.
Prices are mostly determined by demand and supply.
In Los Angeles, everyone wants to live close to the Bay Area due to economic opportunities. Demand has gone up.
But there's no more space to build more houses. Supply has remained the same.
This causes prices to rise fast due to demand.
The world recently passed the point where more than 50% of the global population now live in cities. So, more people are cramming into smaller areas, competing for housing. Hence why housing prices have gone up significantly.
The problem is it a lack of houses. The areas we're trying to all cram into is too small to facilitate that much housing.
@@tylerdurden3722 The goal of Agenda 2030 is to reduce land and allow wilderness and smart cities to create urbanized housing for the masses so they will all live as renters. The goal is to destroy all aspects of production and capitalism so there won't be any energy for food, travel or really anything at all. The goal of Agenda 21 and leaders like Canada's prime minister and Biden is to destroy the economy and private property and consumer markets, to create a world wide destruction of the free world. They will squeeze and squeeze and offer half baked tech solutions that don't work because they cannot be powered by a missing power grid, a missing credit and economic grid and a missing food grid. Corporations and dreamers who produce these wonder gadgets will still try to innovate, but you will hear things like in one POST CARBON institute webcast that things are so much better under Covid because we all learned to live off 10 percent of what we were living off of. But nobody is living and supporting their taxes and house payments on 10 percent of what they were getting pre-covid, it's all funny money bailouts. Without real production you have NO ECONOMY and even the farms are being taken over to create a natural land for wilderness. Which means setting aside resources for countries like China which are producing cities. pouring as much cement in three years actually 40 percent more than the USA poured in 100 years. So capitalistic countries like China will continue to rise with their authoritarian capitalism and NAZI like harvesting of donor organs from their oppressed class and they will pollute 7 times more to produce steel we could have made here in the USA, with no bounds on pollution they will continue to pollute and create far more C02 30 times more than every volcano for three years in the world with C02 output alone. As they do this they will continue to grow a real economy while the US and other five leading nations of the "evil" first world are destroyed by Agenda 2030 plans which are NOT SUSTAINABLE Economically but designed to take away farm land, private property and cram the starving survivors into stacked small rooms in "smart cities" which is a keyword for a controlled population in planned high rise hell like the former Soviet Union or Failed dense population housing in the third world. With Uganda like farming goals of destroying farming to "save the world" from global warming, it's not wonder some hope some kind of robotic housing can be built on the cheap for the drug addicts and poor souls destroyed by their own party spirit or the outsourcing of all jobs to China as we feed, obey and observe the commands from our overlords in China. Some dream of robotic 3d buildings on Mars hoping to get away and 3d printed homes and construction is much like primitive MUD earthen houses, but its' poured via robots. In many countries of the world cement is the worst form of building material. It's even looked down on by Agenda 21 planners seeking to destroy America and capitalism under a guise of false sustainability. Nice technology ideas, but they almost never scale to something that can help people. But with a goal to steal, kill and destroy capitalism all these upstart businesses will be swept away into a sea of unsustainable economic profit as the destruction of the US economy is the key anyway and the goal anyway for Chinese and communist domination. It's cool stuff the tech no doubt, but much of that tech is then used against the masses by the central powers. For example learning about low cement produced compressed earth block was done a lot by the US military as they created houses and complexes in their bases to practice on so they could replicate housing in Iraq. So the Army for example learned a lot about how to make earthen and compressed earth houses, because they needed to develop munitions to shoot through the walls of earthen wall houses in Iraq. So much of the new school technology is just a twist on the old school technology of earth based housing used in the third world. We add a robot instead of making walls out of compressed earth blocks and act as if it's an advantage. By the way they even have compressed earth block building machines that make the blocks which use 10 percent of the cement in a cement block house as less cement is needed when mixed with earth. 10 percent or less cement means a lot less fossil energy is needed to create the same volume of housing. So compressed earth or mixed earth 3d printing might be a cool thing. But then again in America and first world countries the average real estate agent and city assessor likes more traditional housing often being stick framed housing and block houses bring less tax dollars. The high level of taxes and prices of bubble economies for flipping and creating greater value housing to support the central planners or local planner government is also an issue. If you make housing to cheap, they won't be able to tax it and the political push back can be immense. And much of the cool stuff we see from alternative housing livestyles is cool but the embedded energy and large footprint of those structures can't always scale to meet the needs of denser city populations the average earth ship house costs a TON Of money but tries to save on energy efficiency from solar gains. And the average home or self sufficient crop farmer with biofuels, gardening, crops for animals food and energy for their lifestyle is unsustainable via PEAK OIL theory which of course has been proven to be a false energy crisis as well, but much wisdom is piece together in small pieces as they act as if they don't have a plan and are doing things in different approaches. . . I don't condemn all the approaches, but the overall plan is often hidden it's agenda 2030 based on a 1000 page plan which requires the destruction of the capitalistic world and the destruction of farming and capitalism without any alternative system that can work. So this is NOT A SLAM on the GOOD INNOVATION they are trying to do here, it's just a quick warning to tell you these solutions are not perfect nor necessarily based on a solution that is well thought out. You still need raw materials, work, and energy and wealth to make this work. The overall problem is the far right and far left almost have the same goal for the average person.
Trust me... you never want to live in a 3D printed house.
@@firecatgreg Nice novel...
My family is, right now, building a large shed. Creating the outer shell of a building is actually fairly easy-- not cheep, but not disgustingly expensive. It's the sewage/cesspool access, electricity, and water access that are our limiting factors.
If it was 3D printed, it would be both disgustingly expensive and terribly badly built.
No it's the permits and nonsense of government that is the real issue.
@@dcohn99 You mean the permits and nonsense that prevent your next-door neighbors from setting up an open cesspool and a tinderbox right next to your property line?
@@timhofstetter5654 And ugly
@@sdrc92126 And ugly. True story right there. 8)
This is really cool, but the problems facing homeless people isn't a shortage of homes.
This is probably the most profound video I've seen this year
Cool, lol
glad I'm not alone!
You definitely need to fool RUclips's algorithms if this is the most profound video you've seen.
Then go to different ET channel, this technology is longtime out for us 🙃
This is almost entirely fantasy.
What about printing a house makes it free? Does it still not require materials and a piece of land for it to exist on?
...and vast energy and plumbing and electrical and roofing and flooring and cabinetry and drywall and painting and septic and water and civil work and driveway...
Just leftist logic.
@@e3498-v7l that would be a contradiction in terms...
@@kevincrosby1760 I'm afraid you're right, I haven't thought it through.
The idea is, if Biden’s $200 billion housing project uses this technology, everyone will have a home, thus reducing the prices of the things people need and thus effectively giving even people on $7.25/hour a massive effective pay increase.
I love the idea of using technology to help people in need. I wish one day I will have an organization that prints homes for low income families.
I'm sick of people acting like removing the labour cost of housing will make housing affordable .
There's very little material and labour cost in a house. Avarage house is 60k labour and materials the rest is developer profits .
Removing the labour cost just means more developer profits and less jobs the workers 😡
I still won't be able to attend a house I allso won't be able to build them for others to get food.
@@avancalledrupert5130 I hear you man, but it depends who’s in charge of the housing market, doesn’t it?
If resources allocation is handled between the State and housing developers (both of whom are quite often self-serving parasites), you can bet that prices will hike on.
If resource allocation is designated to a benevolent & impartial AI, without such self-serving impulses, then this might be the greatest thing you’ve seen in the last 40 years!
Mars is going to have a lot of these printed homes!
Okay sir, noted.!
I can already imagine Mars being Tatooine
4:42 hold on a sec. Overwhelming majority of homeless people are men. California - the most woke socialist state has around the same number of homeless people as the rest of them combined. And you say it's because of DOMESTIC VIOLENCE or BANKRUPTCY? No. In all of those cases the reason can be summarized in just one word THE LEFT. Morally elevated idiots of no known knowledge of anything practical living a 170 years old dream.
Houses are too expensive? Obviously! Millions are flooding in from Latin America. What would you expect?
And no. A house IS NOT build in 2 days for half the price. Construction, which this idea is so about is a least cost, time, effort consuming stage. The WHOLE rest is done by hand.
No one is going to mars
You can get one if you are holding Dogecoin
So you got to love how they casually leave out all the other things required to actually have a live in house.Like electrical, plumbing,windows and much more.
Just forget all of that important stuff. Ooh! Ahh! ...Follow along.
Well if you’re only earning $3 a day, then you’re probably also on government assistance receiving unemployment checks or other checks that can cover electrical, water, and other bills.
@@dinomightstudios4119 ....He’s not talking about how to pay the bills,,,,,, He’s saying that the house wiring, plumbing, windows, doors, heat & A/C..... all missing from the video.
@@boomstick4054 Oh, but didn't you hear? These will use passive heating/cooling. No need for all those expensive "luxuries". The people "living" in them won't have money for "utilities", because they wont have jobs. These are essentially glorified stone huts. What this video really overlooks is the environmental impact of mass producing "soil based material". Vast amounts of "soil", even if "locally sourced", means massive digging sites. Where is all this "soil" going to come from? How much natural area will have to be sacrificed to make all this? According to www.davidmoore.org.uk/21st_Century_Guidebook_to_Fungi_PLATINUM/Ch01_03.htm#:~:text=Only%20about%207.5%25%20of%20the,centres%2C%20land%20fills%2C%20etc. , only 7.5% of Earth's surface is covered in "soil", and a growing population will need all of it for food production.
This site has an even grimmer picture. www.earthsciweek.org/classroom-activities/how-much-soil-there "The last section (1/32nd or 3 percent of the apple) represents the area of the world developed by humans. Now, carefully peel the last 1/32nd section. This small bit of peel represents the portion of our planet that is soil on which humans depend for food production and similar uses. So, like water and air, soil is a very important and limited natural resource." Just saying.
@@dinomightstudios4119 Why not using those guys which cannot afford the house as work force to their future homes. In the end the printer is using more or less the same materials. The houses are not affordable because of high cost with labors? Then you have the solution. Don't teach people to be lazy, I think:D.
LA judge ordered the homeless sheltered in the next 30 days, finally. I want one of these homes.
They should open up fully. Their own policies created their problem.
Nice walls. Now install the windows, electrical, plumbing pipes and showers, sinks, toilets, HVAC, appliances, roofing, insulation, counters, cabinets, finishings, flooring, carpets, doors, tiles, trim, etc.
And paint it all. 🎨
Hi, really love the content you guys put out. What I'd really appreciate though, would be a more extensive list of sources. While I'm quite happy to take your word for it on most matters, I'd feel a lot more comfortable recommending your videos to friends and family, if your claims were backed up with sources more often. Also, I'd sometimes like to read more on specifics you present but don't go into that much.
I wonder how these 3D printed houses handle earthquake forces compared to traditional buildings? I'd be very interested to see the results of that as I reckon you could
print a very sustainable quake proof house way quicker and cheaper than currently possible.
I really like the idea of printing the body parts
Me too. I'd like to order the face of Brad Pitt to replace my existing face.
Future former construction worker ' Ín my time, houses we build our houses one brick at the time ! ..'
Future kids : 'Sure grandpa 🙄'
Former construction worker cant afford kids :)
That's how they'll be built until humans are extinct.
Nothing has changed.
Future kids will be plugged into the A.I. mainframe, they'll no longer be thinking for themselves and the A.I. won't want the kids learning about the days when people thought for themselves and then screwed over the later generations... Oooh, they're already connected.
@@reggiep75 I hope not...But it's going that way already.
@@reggiep75 There'll never ben an AI mainframe. There'll never be AI. True AI would be worthless to us or anyone else.
Kids will be plugged into a network, though, one full of distributed-computing nodes that use video games to get kids to process data for free.
This is fantastic, No one should be homeless. Love it
Great story, thank you Pindex. The solutions are beautiful.
Yo anyone else notice that some of these 3d printed houses look just like the houses on the Flintstones? That one shot looked like bedrock the city from the show
mud huts made from cow shit ...OH can't use cow shit they fart and pollute
@@snapon666 Well that just put Alexandria Ocasio "Cowfarts" Cortez right out of a useful job.
This is amazing! I love it!
fyi: homelessness in us (or anywhere in the western world) is not a lack of houses problem.
Makes me sick
Yeah it's the fact that industry is becoming robotic and all this is not about helping homelessness this is pushing human out of the work force no middle class no unions 9 to 5's tougher to make a living.
Homelessness is a socio economic problem, if society doesn't care about people then homes will never be available to all that need it
Indeed. There are more empty houses than homeless people. The only reason homelessness is a problem is because it is not profitable to house them.
We'll need all these houses for the homeless bricklayers.
What does a society that cares about people look like? And how does it differ from the current one? IDK
@@michaelstreeter3125 it would be a society where everyone has a house, everyone has enough food to eat for starters
We have enough food on this earth to feed every single person, we have enough houses to house everybody- it is just not seen as profitable to do so
@@michaelstreeter3125 For sake of argument i assume you know some of the horror stories of US health (un)care system, where you can go broke just because you have some complicated health issues, now imagine a system where you do not go broke under similar conditions, and this will scale throughout much of
I met a Mexican guy who lived in a tent in a homeless area to save money to buy a place to live. The place was really crappy and considered to be an impoverished area. So I was able to bring in food trucks. Almost everyone was Hispanic and really nice. It helped that I learned to speak Spanish
Thats a very nice story but stay on topic man !
He's on topic. He exposes one additional reason for homelessness. And the primary causes - Affordability and utilities. You can't afford to save if you're paying property taxes and utilities. It's a perpetual state enforced on the low paid.
This is a great way to build homes! Hats off to the people who came up with this incredable idea!😊
Land prices are the issue, not necessarily the construction cost though this helps. Land prices are artificially inflated & controlled via those that profit off of this situation.
Lovely, “you’ll own nothing be jobless and be totally dependent on the government and be happy” davos, the forth industrial revolution...
2030, we own nothing and we are happy… F the new world order.
"Depend on the government", you're kidding, right? Government is just the place where power is organised, the interface between the powerful, and the sections of the population hired to protect the powerful, like police etc, and protect and project their power, like military and intelligence agencies. That's why we have things like "rights", we fought their wars, but when they don't even need people to build bigger and bigger prisons, and machines that never get tired and cannot be bribed guard them, there'll be no need for a government that you can depend on. The power hungry are never kind to the people they have no need for.
Moronic summation .. at best.
Funny how ignorant you are.
This will be really good - only needs a few economic migrants, vaxxed out of their mind's and into dull submission to push buttons for pennies. (That's after they have buried all those that died of vaxxinations!!!). The WEF elite and their slave survivors; to act as maintenance men. The are saving the planet - but not the inhabitants. Wakey wakey folks - they ain't doing this for you!
Thank you for an uplifting and educational documentary. Bravo to all involved!
The video got off the original heading of houses, to an article on 3D printing in general
Houses are so much more than just walls, the cost for a normal house won't decrease by much, if at all.
This. Things are worth whatever supply/demand dictates and whatever the perceived utility value of that thing is. This will ultimately just make housing developers more profitable.
@@ezicarus8216 When? You ask as if education begins and ends on exact points in time. I never stop learning. Can you explain how supply and demand is a fallacy? In my city, house prices are skyrocketing recently, because the demand is outstripping the supply. That's no fallacy.
@@ezicarus8216 How is that relevant to your assertion that supply and demand is a fallacy?
@@ezicarus8216 Okay. I don't live in North Korea. Ready for your explanation.
Labour costs, plant costs, manufacturing costs and more are all deduced massively from this type of production. The material itself doesn't even need to be made in a factory!
It also would produce houses faster, flooding the market and making your average house cheaper thanks to lowering demand.
M+E, roof and substruct might still be the same price but you've eliminated almost every other cost.
Your comment is short sited at best.
Wow... Wow. I am blown away!!!! Incredible. Now THAT is novation! The future people, the future!!!!!!
I love this tech... But it begs the question; How many human jobs will be lost, and what is going to be done to cover those losses?
When you lose your job for whatever reason, you find another. Im 55 and Ive had to do it more times than I can count. Noone bailed out the pony express riders or the telegraph operators
There is still going to be a ton of work in the finishing/carpentry industry.
Retrain them? Let them indulge in living rather struggling for life?
UBI
This is amazing. But that means an awful amount of construction workers out of work.
That's every jump in technology ever though
"humans need not apply"
Knew I'd find this somewhere.
Excellent! I think this is the second best thing that gets people out of a job. The first, of course, would be making lawyers obsolete.
It's a hard transition between capitalism and socialism. But we are amongst it.
I really like the idea of using bio-waste from agriculture to build homes/huts and it's natural insulation properties, here in Canada a lot of polutions comes from using fuel to keep us warm in winter. It would be great for building cottages off the grid, and sheds in people's backyards as opposed to buying the current plastic or metal sheds that end up in landfill. Printing furniture and more with all the plastic waste we produce, would really help because right now most plastic end up in the garbage.
Unfortunately plastic and many organic products are not used in buildings because they either burn too easily or give off fumes that kill when they burn.
They are cheap and would be used everywhere if they were safe
Oh my god i need one. Ive been living in a van since new years along with my husband and dog. There is hardly any room.
Van Nuys would be my guess...
And there goes the “trades” right out working mans door and right into the unemployment office. I have been following this 3D house building innovation from the beginning. Now I see a complete house built by a robot operated by one or two unskilled laborers in 24 hours this is the ultimate end of building trades jobs.
I guess it’s all about modernization
And the need to move away from money and capitalism.
I used to think same thing but now we can't find any construction workers so i am thinking we kinda need this type of thing. Of course, I have the benefit of living in the future and addressing a comment made in a much different world of mid 2021.
When the labor crunch hit, i felt like a fool for not anticipating it because i knew that after the Black death the plague made a tour of Europe, peasants had bargaining power for like the first time in centuries. Why? because so many had died that the ruling class had no choice but to pay almost a living wage. And peasants had options. A neighboring lord would protect and value a good worker, welcoming if they decided to leave their lord.
But me, my lord treated me fairly well when my life fell apart during the worst of this disaster. And now that my money is worth 20% less than what it was a few years ago, i got a raise to almost cover that (of course the govt says it's only like 8% inflation but other than my mortgage, anything i go buy is 20% to 100% more expensive than it was a year or two ago.. Literally anything. I can't think of a single good that hasn't increased by at least 25%. Services have as well....)
A little over 10 years ago all we had were flip phones starting to becomes smart. Technologies growth looks exponential to any person who observes the advancements over the last couple decades. It's scary to think what things will be like 10 years from now especially with this new level of control of the masses that's being implemented.
But it's slowed. We're reaching the limits of what we can physucally build for microchips AT THE ATOMIC SCALE. Because once we get down to silica only a few atoms thick, it doesn't work anymore. Moore's law has slowed more and more. But we were still getting faster chips for less money, but they weren't twice as fast as before, and they weren't half as much.
Now, the price has actually been INCREASING for comparable chips or slightly better chips. Their cost isn't increasing as fast as inflation, but it's still an issue. Until we hit a BIG break and there are two ont he horizon that are inevitable: nano tech/nanobots for building all the components other than the chips, making all the other stuff really small, and 2) quantum computers. Once we can have quantum computers at room temp (or even with conventional refrigerators and not like liquid nitrogen) size won't matter so much. and then, a little futher out, is the End Game. Out last invention the last thing we'll ever make: a thing maker, MAKER. General Intelligence AI, Super intelligent General Ai? Whatever it is, a computer that's smart enough to make a better version of itself. Which will of course make an even better version. And then... i think you see where that leads.
It's the last thing we'll ever make for two reasons. One ggood and one really really bad: The good reason is taht we won't NEED to make anything ever again because the thing-maker maker will be making (inventing, prototyping, refining, then manufacturing) all the things and doing it better, faster, cheaper. So we can just chill. But we can't chill for long! Becuase of the bad reason! it iwll destroy us!
Now I want to see a Paul Bunion style battle between the 3d printer, precise placerbot, & a team of home builders!
compare a team of people to a machine which was built to do exactly what is measured in the competition isn't a competition ..
let anything be in the way, uneven floor, low quality material, something that forces to change the planned structure to be slightly different .. and the machine will be in serious troubble.
if everything goes as planned .. it will be totaly out of competition
Yep, then try doing structural tests with them.
The battle was scheduled, but Paul Bunion was forced to drop out because of foot pain. ( Bunyans)
This is amazing. It's good to know that the future isn't all doom and gloom. ^_^
Except all the construction workers who will be laid off. Maybe they can move into one of those 3D printed homeless shelters?
Lack of house is a tiny component of the problem.
We've had the technology to build affordable housing for everyone for decades. The Soviet Union did it half a century ago.
The problem is that houses are a free market commodity and we, the people have been deliberately driving up prices. The last time housing prices dropped was 2008 and the government scrambled to force them back up to protect the wealth of banks and the super rich.
It will never be economically viable to build affordable housing until we fundamentally change how the economy works.
It has a lot of positive potential. Especially if they find a way to recycle cheaply. But I can also imagine 3d printed mansions becoming a new status symbol for the spoiled rich, instead of being used to house the poor.
Careful what you wish for.
@@noleftturnunstoned There are a lot people in this world who shouldn't be idle.
I like how they were talking about how homeless people don't have a job to afford housing. Then later in the video talked about 3D printing housing will eliminate 70% of housing labor force. 👍
Excellent, please keep videos like this coming. Can't only be doom and gloom if we are ever going to actually solve the world's problems.
We are not sokving the worlds problem. We ARE the worlds problem. Esp. the unsustainable life style we in the "West" think about as "normal".
This kind of technology creates more problems than it solves, it strips people from their jobs and makes them surplus to needs. Then it creates wealth for only those wealthy enough to invest in its development and profitable use. Disruptive technology is a threat not a solution.
You are being naive. If you were employed in the construction industry or associated services this video would be like a looming redundancy notice. It wont solve homelessness if it creates unemployment. Big Tech innovations seem to only benefit the wealthy in the long run, while the jobless and poor it creates have to depend upon charity or the state. Stick the homeless in a pod while the rich extend their lives with the surgical use of printed organs! Its a recipe for misery.
@@jarofspanners3523 No, you are naive if you think you can stop the development of new technology, a Luddite if ever there was one. There have to be political changes to accompany the technological changes that are going to come whether you like it or not, and that is what we need to fight for, not ”burn the machines”. Also, I hope you don’t work a JCB, it put loads of people out of work that just used spades...
@@pcuimac 🤢 Barf!
I think this is the first non Stephen Fry video of yours that I've watched
Me too.
@Pindex fake go away
@@FaulksDigital wow, how do they make these fake accounts?! different encoding of the characters or?
@@kaziqta5053 it doesn't have the name border and you can name a brand channel anything you like
My dream is to live in the Yorkshire countryside like my family did for centuries before the WW1. As a young man I can only hope 3D printing is available in the UK in the next few years maybe making it possible for me to own a piece of Yorkshire where I can own a house, instead of the depressing reality of renting for years and years or getting a loan/mortgage for a house I can barely afford.
All the things about the help for people without homes is so beautiful, it gives me hope in humanity again
And it's mostly lies. By printing houses they remove human labor, which creates homeless people without a job.
@@pcuimac i was thinking the exact thing.. reducing the need of construction workers by up to 70%. So, creating homes, for the homeless, and for the people made homeless, lmao.
As it creates more homeless how is that helpful when people have no job they were trained or learned on the job?
Housing Hoax😅
These 3D printing technology are being prepared for AI and robotics😂😂
This is what they're doing now? 😀I would love to have one build by your company robot. That's awesome!
"It will take some time to go from a small heart to a big heart" Mr. Grinch can relate
As a building surveyor I would love to see a low carbon building, but in the south-west of England these single skin walls will be damp and mouldy
So design it with spacings for isolation.
I see concrete made with nuclear reactor-based power as the way to get around the stated problems they were saying of having too much fossil fuel based power in making concrete.
Alternatively, to make the structure less porous, use the direct metal laser sintering robots to make the houses out of stainless steel on the outside to better protect against water damage.
Evan Nibbe And a 1,000 year toxic problem from not using fossil fuels. It's pure insanity to think that anything resulting in something with vast destructive potential should the detritus escape is a solution. Look at Chernobyl and Fukushima to see the folly of nuclear power. It's a reduction in our global polluting footprint that's required and only consuming less power will solve that but that means reducing economic growth and lifestyles to accomplish it, something that's unacceptable to the free market system. Innovations often just promote maintaining current philosophies to perpetuate the system that's not working to try and make it appear to be working. A fools paradise.
I understood that we have plenty of housing, and housing is expensive because people with money accumulate it to up sell or rent, which artificially drives up rent and home prices. I'd like to see rent and mortgages capped at a reasonable percentage of household income. If you want to rent or sell to someone you must offer something within their cap. We'd have to do it gently, but it could end the practice of hoarding land and housing to jack up the prices and turn wealth into more wealth.
but that is how the rentier class makes money. they wont part with the goose with the golden eggs willingly. it will require the use of force. it always has, historically.
I think the better way to stop the hoarding of land is to impose a progressive property tax where you have to pay say $1*(value of all land you own)*atan(ln(value of all land you own)/1000)/pi. This means that it suddenly makes sense for landlords to divide up and sell their units to their tenants (potentially for mortgages which have a monthly interest equal to what the rent would be) in order to decrease the total tax liability of everyone even if the total value of the property remains the same.
This way, when those owners go to develop the property they just bought with additional units, they can now sell those additional units under similar terms, and as an area becomes more desirable, the profits from these sales can be distributed to more people!
Imagine they started making houses underground, utilizing mirrors for sunlight (I'm sure theirs better ways) and above ground imagery to mimick windows, maybe along with speakers to hear the outside world. Fire escapes and an elevator for furniture and one for people, to put furniture onto the ground floor you're living in, to make it easier to move in. A vent system to have fresh air from above constantly flowing in aswell. It'd make living so much easier. Almost like an underground apartment. It'd mean we an rid houses on the ground level and then leave room for trees and even parks and trails and possibly MORE!
"Wont need heating or air conditioning"
I call bs on that one, welcome to Finland.
It's Los Angeles, for crying out loud. Palm trees.
@@edennis8578 What about AC then?
So how do they install the plumbing and electrical in the walls?
Surface 😆😆😆
the walls with trusses will prob be ok due to the vertical gaps, but the flat concrete with no gaps inside will prob need to be chased.
This is truly a huge step forward and the technology is amazing. Part of the problem they will run into is the cost of the land. My house according to Zillow is worth over $500,000, but my opinion is it shouldn't cost anything more than $80,000 mainly due to the land. Next issue is how will the companies exploit this for much more financial gain than the original concept here to make things better for humanity
Hah. They're still going to hock these at us for 250k+ each.
This is all great, if we can also find work or welfare for those put out of work as a result. No point reducing costs by 70% if you create 70% more out of work labourers.
Yes there is a point!
If we can save massive amounts of money on housing for everyone, we can put them to work with the money going to such things as college or trade school scholarships, as well as investing into cool new industries they can work in.
@@evannibbe9375 ...but why does no-one welcome the answer to the problem of unrestrained population explosion rather than just joining-in by asserting 'It's just instinct'..? Instinct is watching male pigeons in a city start flirting with the nearest female pigeon...male humans are little different - except that female humans aren't as preoccupied with food as are female pigeons. The solution is all male humans staying totally celibate until the one, eternally right, true love female is unexpectedly encountered (with his never looking for her but focusing on uniquely advancing all life forms as his priority as should be her priority in life rather than looking for a child/house/income provider) - and - as there is only ever one right boy for every girl and one right girl for every boy, folk may gradually start to abide by that comment from the famous western writer Louis L'Amour: "Why get married just because everyone else does..?" - and I wonder how ridiculing responses to this are going to 'fit into current human social reality'...
transfer labor market to where its needed afterwards: food production
It’s funny how the building made by the company called Wasp was the one that reminded me most of wasps nests. No just the way it looks but the fact that it was made from plant pulp just like how wasps used chewed up plant material to make their hanging nests.
This video is phenomenal
I'm confused, this video is from a different channe right - I remember watching some of this content reccomended in the last episode on Pindex? Are you guys working on another Stephen Fry narrated episode?
This video is from our sister channel, Digital Engine, just to help introduce them. Stephen will still voice our future Pindex videos : )
0:50 If only they explained what's going on less than a minute in.... If only
@@tiaxanderson9725 I find the main content on this channel really good. The detail is pretty deep and it's thoroughly research to be fair.
@@davidpereira9058 I mean I suppose that's fair. But lots of channels do a one-off video where it's literally just a video of a sister channel or not-main channel. It really shouldn't confuse you... but then again, as XKCD suggests, maybe you're just one of the 10 000 today.
This channel just wanted to promote their sister channel and uploaded one of their videos to the main channel.
@@tiaxanderson9725 I'm not really on that RUclips drip tbh, so not so common in my view... 50 secs would have been way too late especially after seeing content already promoted on the same channel. We're all different, but hopefully the feedback gets the channel thinking about how to keep an audience interested instead of assuming there isn't much else that the channel has to offer, like in my case .. Happy Easter. 🙂
3D printing is one of the technologies that will overwhelmingly help humanity. The world should be getting behind 3d building.
Yes, we'll need lots of cheap housing for all the unemployed and homeless construction workers.
and everyone else soon as AI takes over all jobs
No one should have to experience homelessness. Even when re-housed the mark it leave's and the stuff a person goes through while homeless haunt's us.
And all that ppl, which work like a builders... where they will get 3$ daily if their will be without job :D There will lost too much ppl job in early future... I have no clue, what we will do with that.
Do bugs get into the insulation? Also how does the foundations work?
How ironic. These 3-D printed accommodation will have to house the homeless construction workers made obsolete by these 3-D printers.
There is a lack of construction workers around the world. This won't displace anyone really
Exactly!
This is amazing.
Looks and sounds great. I just hope and pray that human greed doesn't take control and ruin all the good that these fantastic new ideas can produce.
What a wonderful way to build houses! It's a revolution in building!
Fabulous, so many ways to utilise 3D printing.
A bit better than printing your own gun eh?
13:10 heart cells will contract rythmicly if you just add glucose, it is the syncing up of those cells that is the real issue, not the how to make it beat itself.
Amazing! Congrats for the video!
The sad thing is in The US we already have enough houses for people to live in but because it won’t bring anyone a profit. Homeless people don’t have that right so the houses just lay vacant.
And so many of their tents are decorated with huge flags. The state of the American Dream.
in the netherlands we have more than enough houses for everyone but young people cant move out of their parents houses because the rents in the cities are too high and nobody is selling because the prices go up 10% every year. so the market has 0 liquidity. even though there are like a million vacant houses in the country.
Are you personally prepared to relinquish your resources so some stranger can have an imaginary "right"?
If everyone had a right to a residence, what would stop people from trashing a place and moving on to the next place? They'd set up a burn barrel in the living room and take out all the windows and copper wire to sell them.
@@timhofstetter5654 having a right to 1 free residence doesnt mean you get to trash it and move on. they would have to live in it after they trash it. if people want to live in trash, no one can stop them. but we can give them 1 chance to do better. and a tiny house or trailer only costs a couple thousand bucks. its literally cheaper to give homeless people small housing than to make them sleep on the street where they will steal, do drugs, get sick, etc. hospitals and law enforcement cost more than housing does.
@@TheSuperappelflap so today people make a mistake for whatever reason which tenders them homeless. So you say it's heartless to let them be homeless and we need to give them 1 free house. If they screw it up that's their problem and they're homeless again. People will call you heartless because it's so cheap to just print them another house. See the slippery slope? Someone will always have a bigger heart and be willing to give someone more no matter if you think they deserve it or not. It's not their money they are giving away. Its the community which they believe has a responsibility to take care of everyone no matter how much they have messed up in the past. They only need one more chance and a little more help and they will fix their lives. After all, it's cheaper to give them something than to force them to do without.
The question isn't what you think is reasonable to sacrifice to help someone, but what society thinks is reasonable to force you to sacrifice to help others. Eventually, you run out of other people's money.
These 3D houses will be a better quality than many builders build.Get on with it and start this grandscale.
I get the feeling that in the US, they would 3d print a house for a couple thousand bucks, then put it on the market for a million dollars.
They 3d printed some houses in new york and iirc they're on the market for 350-500k each.
This is absolutely amazing!!!
You are even more amazing
Nothing will literally ever replace ceramics nor concrete in for the same application, I am astounded everytime I hear this.
If we want to not use concrete, will use built-in drills to secure structures, and-or pre-fab stilt structures.
I like your new way of narration.
Thanks. It's from our sister channel, Digital Engine. Stephen Fry will still voice Pindex videos : )
@@Pindexsf He speaks very well but the heavy UK accent is not for me :)
@@Pindexsf Thank God! As good as this is, Stephen Fry is a treasure!
LOVED IT!!♥️
if you make the house small enough could you put a kiln around it to bake the clay/dirt clay to turn it ceramic?
I'll be partykiller here. This tech is beautiful. But if we don't evolve the rules of our society, people working in building will just loose their jobs, while the owners of these bots will get richer. Tech alone can't save us from capitalism. Dreaming is good and all, but if we want to live the dream, we also need to work on the core problem.
Yeah and only the rich will have access to organ replacement in the US.
We need to be “saved from capitalism”!?
You’ve got to be one of those “non-deplorables” produced by a university education. Only universities produce such mindless ignorance and stupidity.
@@gunglegeorge7213 You call me stupid and ignorant, yet you didn't even try to find one argument.
By the way, since I'm ignorant (and not from the US), would be so kind as to explain this "non deplorable" and "university" hatred thing ?
the solution for that is quite simple; automation tax.
@@TheSuperappelflap That's only part of the solution. I takes from the owners, that's a good first step, but it doesn't give any solution to the jobless.
And I think it is hard to enforce. Just one exemple. Human workers' condition already get neglected at Amazon and regulation doesn't really manage to strike Jeff Besos.
We also have to improve the structures that enforce work laws.
Awesome. I’m so impressed.
Where do they install the electrical wiring or pipes? Is it inside the wall or do they install it on the outside surface of the wall after everything has been printed/built?
Way to go Marin! the heart thing is AMAZING!!! how cool is technology going to get?
Not gonna find that on Shapeways anytime soon.
ingenious icon
Now this is a wonderful application for technology!!! No excuse for leaving people HOMELESS and placing the BLAME on them!!
The one who invest in the care for homeless poeples will be bless and they will make a great whealth..👍😘💞💎🌈🙏🎉🌸💐
Ameen
I'm sincerely amazed ⭐
Keeping segments that actually show the techniques to a minimum or speeding up those segments so they're a blur. Video production at its best.
This is a Problem that doesn´t need 3d printed houses It needs social change
@Naymul Islam not the OP but I think I get what he's referring to. In my country there's a huge incentive to keep housing supply low and costs high because a lot of people make a lot of money out of property and even for those with just one house, a loss of property value is a vote loser. We've had the technology to build more houses for a long time but it didn't happen anyway.
However this video highlights other benefits to this technology so its still cool.
@Naymul Islam Yes it helps but to end the problem or at least make it so small and insignificant you have to fight the route causes.
(wich are a bad health care system.
barrely any worker protection,
very expencive education, etc)
Yo two of your examples (expensive health care and education) are literally technological and will one day be solved with technology. The problem the video outlines is houses being expensive and this makes houses cheaper. What's the beef
@@garethhobday3601 ÄÄÄMM I live with cheap healthcare and pricy houses can be solved
just look for Vienna. The housing prices are low becouse the comune goverment (city goverment) owns most houses and rent is pretty cheap.
Those problems can surely be solved by technology but Patents make most things even Insulin (wich can cheaply be massproduced) very expencive
So Yes tech can solve those problems but waiting until this happens doesn´t excuses doing nothing until it becomes feasebul.
And Healthcare that is expencive is a problem that cannot be solved with technology but has to be solved with policies that must shatter monopolys and price contol by companies.
Even the drug that can heal everything and can be mass produced cheaply doesn´t help anyone if no one can pay for it
Sorry for the long text
@Naymul Islam Well we are all civiliced people we just forget it sometimes
Interesting, in old Africa, we used to build homes in 24hrs using mud. It's definitely worth going back to that standard
'in old Africa". Africa's a whole continent dude...
As a retired builder i remember 'Experts' saying Machines will soon be building All constructions around the World.......that was back in 1972 !!