Computer-assisted ice construction

3D Printing & Imaging
Computer-assisted ice construction
icefabbing.jpg

Scholars from Québec’s McGill University converted a FAB@HOME 3D printer to output in ice.

Currently, the practical applications of this project include commercial and industrial part modeling, and construction for the ice-tourism industry. For instance, small-scale ice models represent economical alternatives to intricate 3D models of architectural objects, be they scale models of buildings, site models, or building details. Presently, casting techniques are being investigated in order to produce high-quality metal copies from ice originals. In the long term, inhabitable, environmentally-friendly structures will be built at the architectural scale using computer-assisted techniques, thus increasing the level of automation in an industry that is currently very labour intensive.

[Via Beyond the Beyond]

2 thoughts on “Computer-assisted ice construction

  1. Nightstar says:

    This is very interesting. How smooth an object can it make?

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My interests include writing, electronics, RPGs, scifi, hackers & hackerspaces, 3D printing, building sets & toys. @johnbaichtal nerdage.net

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