New York startup works to revive classic building techniques

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  • Опубликовано: 3 май 2024
  • Many of the world's greatest historical structures and buildings have been constructed with stone, but the material is largely no longer used in construction because of its cost. A New York startup is trying to change that.
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Комментарии • 408

  • @QuantumSpaceToaster
    @QuantumSpaceToaster 16 дней назад +588

    FINALLY SOMEBODY TRYING TO BRING BACK BEAUTY IN AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE

    • @kayasth01
      @kayasth01 14 дней назад +11

      Bro thats not American architecture it is indian architecture which is copied by that firm and provide services there

    • @edheldude
      @edheldude 14 дней назад

      The architect schools and professor will fight against it because they're following the Marxist doctrine.

    • @Staroy
      @Staroy 14 дней назад +12

      @@kayasth01 its not indian, india stole it from the khmer empire

    • @QuantumSpaceToaster
      @QuantumSpaceToaster 14 дней назад +8

      @@kayasth01 Nah i just meant architecture in america not from america

    • @loafoffloof3420
      @loafoffloof3420 13 дней назад +3

      @@kayasth01bro it was stolen form the Roman Empire

  • @thibaultlibat368
    @thibaultlibat368 17 дней назад +457

    The irony of one of the example for stone building being the pantheon in Rome, the largest free standing non reinforced concrete structure in the world

    • @alexandarvoncarsteinzarovi3723
      @alexandarvoncarsteinzarovi3723 15 дней назад +7

      Agrippa would be [proud

    • @galenargyros4082
      @galenargyros4082 13 дней назад +35

      The pantheon was built with more than just concrete though, it had every material you could imagine including bricks, pottery shards, and stone. The columns along the portico were cut from Egyptian granite and there are plenty of marble panels, columns, and entablatures within the Pantheon that survive today that were all carved by hand.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland 11 дней назад +5

      That is why the Roman architects were the master concrete builders.
      The Romans had *underwater concrete* settting.
      It's only gone worse since then.

    • @Freshbott2
      @Freshbott2 10 дней назад +2

      I thought a bigger irony was looking at that crappy Brookfield joint with completely featureless polished stone on nothing but the steps.

    • @uncertaintytoworldpeace3650
      @uncertaintytoworldpeace3650 8 дней назад +1

      @@AudieHolland Uhhh u aint ever seen em just throw a bunch of unopened concrete packs onto a riverside? would that not set well?

  • @incyphe
    @incyphe 18 дней назад +473

    glass and steel towers built in the past decades will be demolished. But many beautiful buildings built in the early 20th century will be around for hundreds of years... thanks to people like him.

    • @nick_0
      @nick_0 17 дней назад +8

      glass and steel better 🥱

    • @MightBeAPizza
      @MightBeAPizza 17 дней назад +27

      ​@@nick_0 it's become excessively used unfortunately.

    • @FunkyJeff22
      @FunkyJeff22 16 дней назад +36

      every era has its mass produced cheap buildings that will be demolished. for obvious reasons we don't see many from the past.

    • @__Man__
      @__Man__ 16 дней назад

      ​@@nick_0causing global warming.

    • @ashleigh3021
      @ashleigh3021 16 дней назад +1

      @@__Man__Embarrassing drivel.

  • @tnnsboy18
    @tnnsboy18 19 дней назад +386

    I'm 10000% for this, the beauty in stone is amazing!

  • @MordecaiDrex
    @MordecaiDrex 19 дней назад +305

    This is incredible. Bring back beautiful architecture!

    • @ladzerty
      @ladzerty 17 дней назад +5

      Yeaaaah! Finally!!!!!

    • @nick_0
      @nick_0 17 дней назад +1

      beautiful architecture is already here 🥱

    • @Picsou313
      @Picsou313 16 дней назад +15

      ​@@nick_0no. Modern architecture is boring

    • @diemes5463
      @diemes5463 15 дней назад +2

      @@Picsou313 most buildings throughout human history are going to be boring because 1. they're built to serve a purpose, not to be monuments that last forever 2. humans get used to what's around them, our current world will look alien to someone from 1000 years ago and vice versa

  • @astraxyz5286
    @astraxyz5286 18 дней назад +133

    The reporters in the last minute sound clueless on what they are talking about 😂. Sounds like a high school presentation making up stuff on the spot and saying random buzzwords to make this seem revolutionary and inclusive.

    • @ecoro_
      @ecoro_ 16 дней назад +16

      Now you know, that's their actual level of competency when the script is not there.
      If you ever worked with a major corporate media reporter, especially if you are a subject matter expert in something, you would be shocked.
      It makes you question everything you ever learned.

    • @astraxyz5286
      @astraxyz5286 16 дней назад +5

      @@ecoro_ Yeah, sometimes I'd watch people watching the news after a segment and the only purpose for the talk at the end is to make you feel like you align or agree with those reporters.

  • @KikoNYC
    @KikoNYC 18 дней назад +113

    Yes!...Bring back beautiful architecture!

  • @AlgorithmAlloy
    @AlgorithmAlloy 16 дней назад +29

    There’s something primal about a building you know could withstand a massive blast and stand for maybe thousands of years

  • @benjamingranet581
    @benjamingranet581 19 дней назад +310

    I’m glad to see this being talked publicly in North America but this have been used for at least 15 years in Europe.
    There is no novelty to it, it’s just a lack of vision from investors and architects.

    • @Jonipoon
      @Jonipoon 18 дней назад +54

      Exactly. As much as it pains me to admit it, the architecture professor is right when he says that this will be limited to historical preservation projects. The ones in power are the architects, and unfortunately the architectural community is a bunch of extremely narrow-minded snobs whom have collectively decided that this type of ”traditional” and ”classic” architecture is nothing but pastiche.

    • @benjamingranet581
      @benjamingranet581 18 дней назад +35

      I’ve studied and worked in the stone carving industry for 10 years. They made the mistake of making it an expensive material lowering the demand, the low demand created low margin that weren’t compensated by the high price. Stone is actually cheap to produce and can be found all around. The problem is that there isn’t any large scale or modern transformation factories most of them are highly inefficient compared to wood or concrete. When I was a CNC programmer 10 years ago, I was using floppy disk to load my programs in the machines and a year after I changed career the company I was working for closed.

    • @benjamingranet581
      @benjamingranet581 18 дней назад +24

      When I was studying in France, there was research groups showing you could replace concrete by stone in mid size apartment buildings. A stone and wood mixed building would have a really low carbon footprint. You would just have the fondations made out of concrete

    • @Megadebt
      @Megadebt 18 дней назад +14

      Funny how the "new world" is always behind the "old world"

    • @MRantroad
      @MRantroad 17 дней назад +8

      @@benjamingranet581 This a tragic reality for a lot of crafts and repairs, here in Sweden the knowledge on how to repair old thing are disappearing so a lot of things must be made new and old thrown away and it's such a waste.

  • @billy.7113
    @billy.7113 19 дней назад +100

    We need more like that. Just came back from Paris, their buildings look a lot more beautiful than ours.

    • @Hiro_Trevelyan
      @Hiro_Trevelyan 16 дней назад +8

      As a Parisian, thank you ! We tend to forget how beautiful our city is, until we visit others...

    • @mkmc94
      @mkmc94 13 дней назад

      it's getting uglier here too...

    • @abel_underwater
      @abel_underwater 13 дней назад +1

      @@Hiro_Trevelyan France, England, Germany architecture is what we need to go back to, many parts of the east coast have that feel , but Id love it if we can pick one or two architecture types and stick to it🥲Make it uniform throughout the country. I personally love Art Deco, a perfect blend of modern and ancient in a way

    • @dabrams84
      @dabrams84 6 дней назад

      Part of the greatness of European cities is also that they were made for pedestrian societies and not for cars. So, the cities are made from the perspective of people who walked from place to place on the streets. We need to also adjust our city infrastructure to prioritize pedestrians.

  • @jackphilipsen452
    @jackphilipsen452 17 дней назад +19

    Yess. this is what we need to bring the Art Deco style back in our lives..

  • @kurtzwar729
    @kurtzwar729 19 дней назад +51

    Well done. Stone is a great building material. Not a lot of old school stone craftsman around today. Concrete is VERY energy consuming. Stone lasts. Bravo.

  • @FidinaQuery
    @FidinaQuery 16 дней назад +11

    Thank you thank you sir! I’ve long mourn the loss of artistic architechture. Glad to know companies like this exist! You are a hero!

  • @fadyedits8681
    @fadyedits8681 4 дня назад +4

    YEEEEEEES BRING BACK ART AND BEAUTIFUL ARCHITECTURE

  • @melissaharris3389
    @melissaharris3389 17 дней назад +35

    Haven't they been using CNC carving to build the Sagrada Famillia in Barcelona for decades?

    • @shiftmym9079
      @shiftmym9079 10 дней назад +2

      I’m pretty sure it could not do the fine details though, just do the rough blocking out.

    • @pawelabrams
      @pawelabrams 8 дней назад +5

      ​@@shiftmym9079So basically the same thing as here :D Here it's also the artist that does the detailing, which is commendable as it provides jobs for humans as well, only the TV station trying to spin it that way that it's the robot that does the job

  • @yoqiu_
    @yoqiu_ 16 дней назад +16

    The professor is right, once you factor in mining + transportation costs + limited suppliers who can control the quantity and price of stone, you're probably gonna end up with a cost that's much less attractive than what's already on the market (glass, steel, etc). No way would it be economically feasible to transport stone across long distances, so stone-based building projects will probably have to be closer to the quarry. Developers are going to opt in for the materials that will yield them the best profit in their projects. But still good to see a use for it in historical/specialty architecture!

    • @PurpleMonkeyDishwasher88
      @PurpleMonkeyDishwasher88 15 дней назад +4

      Plus for large scale projects, it is just unfeasible and unyielding. Much easier to add a floor or change a floor plan on a steel structure vs a stone building.

  • @zzXertz
    @zzXertz 18 дней назад +38

    More beautiful architecture please!!! The cost, effort, and time is so worth it when the alternative is soulless and depressing

  • @MrMorsbach
    @MrMorsbach 11 дней назад +6

    There is a few companies that do this in Europe. A lot of buildings in Berlin and Barcelona have been rebuilt like this for example.

  • @pinegd1
    @pinegd1 День назад +1

    Pineapple Grove Designs has been doing this since 1989. 24,000 architects have specified us on over 300,000 projects around the world.

  • @Hiro_Trevelyan
    @Hiro_Trevelyan 16 дней назад +13

    Anything that brings back beautiful architecture is a good thing. Really glad they could help restore a historic building

  • @lexnite22
    @lexnite22 5 дней назад +3

    Stone is timeless and it'll be great to bring back beauty, to not just the cbd but residential buildings outside of the main centre.

  • @igniteflow
    @igniteflow 17 дней назад +6

    This is fantastic. Not only will it make new buildings more durable and attractive, but it will also help reduce the costs of maintaining and restoring period properties.

  • @observingsystem
    @observingsystem 18 дней назад +8

    I love this! I always loved the stone carved buildings in Amsterdam, the elaborate doorways, so beautiful. Some of those beautiful houses also have stone carvings on the ceilings inside, they might even be able to do details like this too. And for modern design it makes so much more possible. I was wondering if they thought of using hempcrete? I heard it's really strong and better for the environment as well. I love this innovative thinking and to be honest I've never been a fan of the "cold" steel and glass buildings myself, I prefer ornamental. It's nice to let your eyes wander around a building like that and ponder the flowing shapes, there's a soothing quality to it to me.

  • @patrickdennis7041
    @patrickdennis7041 15 дней назад +5

    Most of the antique stone architecture was Stone Cast. Many of the sculptures where duplicated with Molds and a concrete mixture was poured into the mold to form the part. It is still a low cost solution to stone architecture. It is fine if the guy wants to purchase a 7 axis robot for 500k. The old stone casting method could produce better detail for a lot less cost.

    • @azaquarium123
      @azaquarium123 13 дней назад +3

      A lot of it is terracotta too

    • @pinegd1
      @pinegd1 День назад

      Check out Pineapple Grove Designs. 35 years, 24,000 architect specifiers, over 300,000 completed projects around the world.

  • @kayrosis5523
    @kayrosis5523 17 дней назад +9

    This definitely seems like it will mainly be used for historical restoration first and foremost, with some small entrance into the luxury markets, I can definitely see some major corporation or eccentric multimillionaire/billionaire ordering a large ornate stone construction. The vast majority of the dirty commoners won't be living or working in stone buildings anytime soon.

  • @danig75
    @danig75 15 дней назад +9

    In the new world of high tech, the value of craftsmanship and handmade labor is increasing at a faster pace than we expected

    • @JinKee
      @JinKee 14 дней назад

      monumental is literally using robots to carve the stone

    • @joefer5360
      @joefer5360 14 дней назад +3

      @@JinKee At the end the process a hand sculptor adds the finishing touches. Power tools help imagine even greater concepts.

  • @sykaax
    @sykaax 6 дней назад +1

    Good video, i love it. didnt expect such good work.

  • @tfloutofthisworld
    @tfloutofthisworld 3 дня назад

    What an amazing guy, finally some life gets back to architecture

  • @chiluxr250
    @chiluxr250 16 дней назад +23

    This machine can be reproduced under 5000 USD using custom cnc router and opensource software.

    • @nathansimon7607
      @nathansimon7607 15 дней назад +1

      How? I want to build my own one.

    • @bouser10
      @bouser10 14 дней назад +11

      you can build a 7-axis cnc for 5k?

    • @rafael_lana
      @rafael_lana День назад

      Nope, just the raw materials alone would cost you way more, not to mention the electrical parts. If you can make anything remotely like that in size for less than 100k you'll be a millionaire in a week

  • @BroadConcept
    @BroadConcept 13 дней назад

    This is incredible! Imagine the complexity of programming stone work into a machine. Bravo!

  • @gregw74
    @gregw74 13 дней назад +1

    “…that’s just beginning to carve out the possibilities!”. Did everyone catch what he did here? These newscasters are so dang creative and witty!!

  • @MrBatriste
    @MrBatriste 12 дней назад +8

    Bring back classic beauty to architecture

  • @RinoaL
    @RinoaL 13 дней назад +3

    Anything to bring stone back into architecture.

  • @Mark-xd5up
    @Mark-xd5up 5 дней назад

    Fantastic idea! These are the things that make me like America

  • @MarkGilliam-er7rs
    @MarkGilliam-er7rs 18 часов назад

    PETA championing laws against dinosaur labor was a win for everybody

  • @drewlazor575
    @drewlazor575 6 дней назад

    Looks great! Fantastic work

  • @diemes5463
    @diemes5463 15 дней назад +3

    No unit costs mentioned, so it's still too expensive

  • @ShutUpBubi
    @ShutUpBubi 4 дня назад

    THANK YOU SO MUCH

  • @ghostofakina8747
    @ghostofakina8747 14 дней назад

    This is wonderful!

  • @Here4TheHeckOfIt
    @Here4TheHeckOfIt 5 дней назад

    This is great! These buildings need to be maintained and many of its parts replaced. Thank god someone out there loves good architecture and quality.

  • @ramiro041
    @ramiro041 9 дней назад

    I love what this guy is doing !!!

  • @SkipsenPB
    @SkipsenPB 14 дней назад

    I love this idea

  • @helohalo3106
    @helohalo3106 17 дней назад

    That's are amazing, I can't wait.

  • @kingpetra6886
    @kingpetra6886 19 дней назад +1

    Love it.

  • @alextollis
    @alextollis 16 дней назад +1

    I've also seen the same facade restoration done using fiberglass. This is done on upper floors where it's more difficult to tell from the naked eye. Looks just as good.

    • @FlameG102
      @FlameG102 12 дней назад

      I feel like that is asking for trouble, fiberglass will never be as durable, especially at higher floors where the weather impact is increased. it's cheaper, but you'll also need to replace and upkeep it far more frequently.

  • @alexandarvoncarsteinzarovi3723
    @alexandarvoncarsteinzarovi3723 15 дней назад

    I hope we get to see more and more of the classic NYC I saw in movies as a kind in the 90s

  • @MrKYT-gb8gs
    @MrKYT-gb8gs 7 дней назад

    I'm afraid the professor is right. I hope the startup keeps filling the niche market of repairs on historic structures and doesn't try to expand too fast and fail/disappear. Those old buildings need fixing up!

  • @aliceberethart
    @aliceberethart 17 дней назад +4

    People are yearning for this.
    Yearning i say!

  • @aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790
    @aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790 10 дней назад

    GOOD. I'm tired of people complaining that new buildings need to much work to keep standing.

  • @potemkin8606
    @potemkin8606 12 дней назад

    Architecture has always been the cornerstone of Western civilization. Hopefully, with CNC machines and KUKA stone carving robots, it will return to its glory days. Thanks for the original reporting; I really loved the back and forth between the differing views.

  • @Siranoxz
    @Siranoxz 7 дней назад

    This is a hell lot better then all of the modern glass architecture slob we are in now.
    So back to the stone age lol.

  • @NiiAryee
    @NiiAryee 18 дней назад +4

    Stone is timeless, albeit expensive

  • @tszabon
    @tszabon 16 дней назад +1

    You look at the beautifully carved old building facade and say "Wow, someone had real talent, spent so much time and effort to create it so beautifully." Has anyone ever had the same experience when looking at a flat glass/stone facade? Unfortunately, "speed and efficiency" is the main factor these days, and boredom and repetition are the sign of today's urban architecture. Maybe this is intentional so that modern life does not contrast too much with the surrounding buildings?

  • @wackywolven6192
    @wackywolven6192 5 дней назад

    Bringing back classics

  • @nagato2519
    @nagato2519 13 дней назад

    Yes yes yes yes!! Amazing!

  • @shadowmistress999
    @shadowmistress999 18 дней назад +3

    finally beautiful stones on The Rise again
    most things should be made to last centuries and look pretty instead of some glass metal plastic crap that you tear down and rebuild every few decades, profit is not the sole value human should be pursuing

  • @cameronf3343
    @cameronf3343 18 дней назад +2

    This would be great if they could really scale it up! I’d buy

  • @ThecultofCon
    @ThecultofCon 7 дней назад +2

    "Low paid immigrant craftsman"
    Needs lasers and robots to recreate the quality of the old world.

  • @user-jn7pl3ofu
    @user-jn7pl3ofu 14 дней назад +1

    Bring this to Europe!!

  • @Jerbod2
    @Jerbod2 11 дней назад

    Thats great!

  • @thegoodthebadandtheugly579
    @thegoodthebadandtheugly579 12 дней назад

    Well done to this person to create this company.

  • @darius_le_roy
    @darius_le_roy 16 дней назад

    Yes

  • @goldbabycarti3615
    @goldbabycarti3615 11 дней назад

    I’m with it!!! I like this idea 💡

  • @nunyabusiness3786
    @nunyabusiness3786 13 дней назад

    Finally some beauty returns to the world

  • @feeline1120
    @feeline1120 12 дней назад

    Yesssss finally!!!

  • @oscarkong3200
    @oscarkong3200 2 дня назад

    I'm sure Notre Dame will need you.

  • @colstoun4762
    @colstoun4762 14 дней назад

    What is most wild about this is how many businesses are doing it already this is not new or exciting technology, it’s just how it’s done now

  • @darkstepik
    @darkstepik 15 дней назад +1

    MEGALITHIC ARCHITECTURE IS MAKING A COMEBACK

  • @joelarson3528
    @joelarson3528 18 дней назад +4

    Country stone masons in north liberty Iowa has been doing this for a good while

    • @HyperionBadger
      @HyperionBadger 12 дней назад

      Really? I’ll have to visit them sometime.

  • @penguthepenguinj
    @penguthepenguinj 14 дней назад

    Amazing I want this to go global

  • @marcocuesta3668
    @marcocuesta3668 9 дней назад

    This is progress.

  • @statelyelms
    @statelyelms 15 дней назад +1

    This is the sort of thing I wanted automation to be used for.. making impractical or difficult things we really want to have or do, practical.
    Can't wait to see new traditional buildings. Glass is ok, but if you've seen one glass building, you've seen them all.. and they're kind of bland, lose heat like a sieve, and don't respect the region's style or culture at all. This stonecutting technique could genuinely have huge impacts as people look from glass for style to stone ornamentation.

  • @SapphiR3_
    @SapphiR3_ 14 дней назад

    Yes yessss

  • @alphamasterevi1198
    @alphamasterevi1198 15 дней назад

    I'm all for it!

  • @georgepig7362
    @georgepig7362 14 дней назад +1

    I would love to see new art deco skyscrapers like 70 pine and the crysler building

  • @DaBinChe
    @DaBinChe 16 дней назад +2

    $400k for an 7axis cnc is really low cost. A 5 axis mill is easily $1million.

  • @pauldannelachica2388
    @pauldannelachica2388 19 дней назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤ very cool

  • @anowhouston
    @anowhouston 3 дня назад

    Yes a big robot is a classic building technique

  • @Queen-dl5ju
    @Queen-dl5ju 18 дней назад +3

    buildings esp in america are hideous and soulesss... go to any old building and feels amazing

  • @resonanceofambition
    @resonanceofambition 14 дней назад

    I want my Bladerunner tiles now.

  • @Mike-hr6jz
    @Mike-hr6jz 15 дней назад

    It’s called composite combined the two a little of each makes it efficient and spectacular to look at. It’s not an either or it’s a both and

  • @user-nj2kl5xm8y
    @user-nj2kl5xm8y 14 дней назад +2

    Regular cnc presented like innovation

  • @MrDupacz
    @MrDupacz 16 дней назад +2

    after few toulsands of yers there will be only dust from new built architecture, stone is the only thing that will be left of us if anything but layer of plastic

  • @hwizell7478
    @hwizell7478 19 дней назад +4

    Yes, all the tools in
    Michelangelo’s Toolbox
    Sculptured present arks
    #robots #allthetools

  • @mamabatymer6811
    @mamabatymer6811 12 дней назад

    Wow ❤❤❤

  • @ManOfSteel1
    @ManOfSteel1 16 дней назад

    0stone is heavier. you can make a dye and sculpt as many in cement.

  • @istoppedcaring6209
    @istoppedcaring6209 14 дней назад

    this is pretty much an idea we all have had, but the issue is that it's not just the materials but the methods that matter,
    the ecological argument here is that concrete and metals are far worse for the environmont than any traditional building technique, some concrete is kind off required and there is no material that doesn't have a cost to it as well as higher building offcourse taking less space meaning less of a physical footprint for human occupation, by and large though i'd say that we would be better off with rediscovery of traditional architecture
    (but there is a danger here, these styles developed specifically where they did because of a wide variety of elements from cultural exchanges to the very landscape, geological activity, ressource availability,
    just carving a couple stone slabs does not cut it (but it does show how technological advancement is again an element in the equation.

  • @------837
    @------837 День назад

    Ah yes the classic fully automated robot factory.

  • @Iamwolf134
    @Iamwolf134 16 дней назад

    Also what's to stop such concrete from also being reinforced with graphene sourced from biochar?

  • @HeavenlyGust
    @HeavenlyGust 14 дней назад

    They never should’ve stopped using stone

  • @kashmirha
    @kashmirha 18 дней назад +3

    Cool. I love graving, I realised it in Marocco, who were the masters of wood and stone gravings.

  • @DoctorShaunB
    @DoctorShaunB 17 дней назад

    I didn't know him of course, but I think Gaudi would be ok with the rough work being curved out with these robots, and the finer touches of the Sagrada Família finalized by hand.

  • @tshilidzimadzhege4949
    @tshilidzimadzhege4949 19 дней назад +5

    CNC for Rock

  • @George_Washington185
    @George_Washington185 19 дней назад +1

    🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @id104335409
    @id104335409 17 дней назад +1

    Well its not like they are making new buildings there. They are doing replacements for old damaged pieces.
    Something that I would like to ask is why is that Kula robot used on a flat piece? Is it because they just invested in the most versatile machine, so they don't have to buy different machines for different jobs?

    • @drjlrust
      @drjlrust 17 дней назад +2

      At the end of the segment we saw various sculptures that could be made using the robot carver. It's not just for making ornamental replacement parts. That's why they talked about Michelangelo using robots in his studio.

  • @punkressph1
    @punkressph1 16 дней назад

    Does the water used for stone carving there get filtered and reuse it? That's a lot of water usage

  • @dweb2275
    @dweb2275 7 дней назад

    I've been using cnc machines to do stone work like that for years. Nothing new. Omag, Denver, Breton and others make them

  • @marks6663
    @marks6663 5 дней назад +1

    Ah yes classic building techniques like using a 7 axis robot.

  • @silver965
    @silver965 15 дней назад +1

    I do question if this will be the future.
    The cost of working stone will always be higher.
    It is very innovative to bring in CNC technologies to Machine the stone as if it were a piece of metal. It certainly does greatly reduce the cost by removing the need for hundreds of hours of skilled artist labor and turning it in to dozens of hours of Machine time.
    But speaking as someone with a few years of Machining experience, it isn't as if Machining itself is a cheap or inexpensive venture. It isn't. Especially if you are constantly doing bespoke, one-off pieces that require designing and programming each time (which is what is being suggested of the stone here). I suspect the cost of these Machined Stone pieces will be far lower than they traditionally would have been in the past, but still much more expensive than the current modern options of Concrete and steel. I don't think they will catch on for that reason.

  • @7goldenhordes
    @7goldenhordes 14 дней назад

    Which city are they showing at 2:31?