19 Jun 2019

3D printing creates new value for construction industry in UAE

Facility opens up in Dubai to create new value for designers.

Concrete 3D printing is moving to an industrial scale in the United Arab Emirates with the partnership between Freyssinet, e-construct and Draw Link Group, known together as Concreative Middle East. 

The Office of the Future in Dubai, the first 3D-printed office in the world, was designed by e-construct and printed in China. According to research firm MarketsandMarkets, the global 3D concrete printing market is estimated to grow from $1.2 million in 2018 to $1.48 billion by 2023, at an annual growth rate of 317.3 per cent.

Khalil Goghri, general manager of Concreative Middle East, believes that this is the first large-scale concrete 3D printer in the Middle East and by making this tool available to the industry, designers now have the means to design and produce complex concrete architectural and structural elements. “This new technology consumes less raw materials, are more reactive, cleaner, quieter, less gruelling and much safer,” he said.

“Our focus will be where the conventional method of construction is not possible such as complex architectural designs and we will see more and more complex buildings,” he said.

Moreover, he said the cement-based 3D printing disposes the need for conventional moulds and mass production of customised product, and at the same time, saves cement between 30% and 70% and reduces building lead times.

Daousser Chennoufi, co-founder at Concreative, said that the 3D technology will create new value for designers.  “It will create new possibilities, to think out of the box, create new space and shapes where no one has travelled before. Inevitable house and homes will no longer be shaped by the limitation of the old ways, but they will be occupying different volumes and spaces,” he said.

Goghri said the printer at Concreative was supplied by French-start-up XtreeE which has a six-axis robotised arm capable of manufacturing elements 5 metres long and 3 metres high in successive layers. He sees a bright future for the construction industry owing to the increase in demand for complex structures amid generating less waste and the rise in the number of construction projects at affordable rates.