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2007-06-06 10:52:40
Robo-builder threatens the brickie
The Sunday Times January 14, 2007
Robert Booth
IS THE writing on the wall for the brickie? Engineers are racing to unveil the
world s first robot capable of building a house at the touch of a button.
The first prototype a watertight shell of a two-storey house built in 24
hours without a single builder on site will be erected in California before
April.
A rival design, being pioneered in the East Midlands, with ?1.2m of government
funding, will include sunken baths, fireplaces and cornices. There are even
plans for robots to supplant painters and decorators by spraying colourful
frescoes at an affordable price.
By building almost an entire house from just two materials concrete and
gypsum the robots will eliminate the need for dozens of traditional
components, including floorboards, wooden window frames and possibly even
wallpaper. It may eventually be possible to use specially treated gypsum
instead of glass window panes.
Engineers on both projects say the robots will not only cut costs and avoid
human delays but liberate the normal family homes from the conventional designs
of pitched roofs, right-angled walls and rectangular windows.
The architectural options will explode, predicted Dr Behrokh Khoshnevis at
the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, who will soon unleash his
$1.5m (?940,000) robot. We will be able to build curves and domes as easily as
straight walls.
Your shoes, clothes and car are already made automatically, but your house is
built by hand and it doesn t make sense.
At Loughborough University s School of Mechanical and Manufacturing
Engineering, the technology is being backed by a ?1.2m grant from the
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
It involves computer-controlled robotic nozzles which pipe quick-drying liquid
gypsum and concrete to form walls, floors and roofs.
Inspired by the inkjet printer, the technology goes far beyond the techniques
already used for prefabricated homes. This will remove all the limitations of
traditional building, said Hugh Whitehead of the architecture firm Foster &
Partners, which designed the Gherkin skyscraper in London and is producing
designs for the Loughborough team. Anything you can dream you can build.
The robots are rigged to a metal frame, enabling them to shuttle in three
dimensions and assemble the structure of the house layer by layer. The sole
foreman on site operates a computer programmed with the designer s plans.
The researchers in Los Angeles claim their robot will be able to build the
shell of a house in 24 hours. Compared to a conventional house, the speed of
construction will be increased 200-fold and the building costs will be reduced
to a fifth of what they are today, said Khoshnevis.
The rival British system is likely to take at least a week but will include
more sophisticated design features, with the computer s nozzle weaving in ducts
for water pipes, electrical wiring and ventilation within the panels of gypsum
or concrete.
Jala El-Ali, structural designer at Buro Happold the firm that helped design
Arsenal s new football stadium, which is shaped like a flying saucer said
future homes could carry features borrowed from ant hills, honeycombs or sea
shells.
Dr Rupert Soar, in charge of the project at Loughborough, has travelled to
Namibia to seek inspiration from termites, which construct giant mounds by
regurgitating earth in intricate designs.
If you ask a bricklayer to lay bricks in anything other than a straight line,
you ll run into problems, said Soar. But if you ask the robot to make a
squiggly line it really doesn t care.
The robots will also create a smaller carbon footprint than conventional
building methods; and, theoretically, a family could grind down a spare room
when the children leave home.
However, the robot appears to be afflicted by all-too-human obstacles. While
the Americans first robot-built home is predicting a completion date of April,
the Loughborough prototype is unlikely to be built for at least five years.