These 3D-printed homes will house low-income families
Joshua Perez courtesy New Story
The first of some 50 homes planned for Tabasco, Mexico The last time we checked in with Austin-based construction tech startup Icon and housing nonprofit New Story, they were showing off renderings of 3D-printed homes slated to go up in an undisclosed location in Latin America. Six months later, the teams, working with Mexican social housing organization Échale, have unveiled the first two homes built for low-income families in Tabasco, Mexico.
The 500-square-foot houses, designed in collaboration with Yves Béhar and funded by New Story donors, were 3D-printed in around 24 hours, spread across a few days. Layer by layer, the 3D printer, Icon?s Vulcan II, extrudes a proprietary cement-based material called ?Lavacrete? to create a textured wall with curved edges. Eventually, the community will include 50 such 3D-printed homes.
New Story
Each home features two bedrooms, a living room, kitchen, and bathroom. Red tile roofs create an overhang on the front patio, giving residents a place to sit during hot and rainy weather.
To determine who would live in these homes, the team partnered with the local government to survey more than 500 families. The 50 families that will be moving into the community were chosen based on financial and physical need, with most coming from flood-prone areas.
According to New Story, the families will receive the homes with a ?zero-interest, zero-profit mortgage? costing around 400 pesos ...
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