The Architectural Technologist
In this episode of The Architectural Podcast, guest Kirill from AMCreate explains how his company uses an on-site gantry system to 3D-print concrete houses in New Zealand, describing the process, equipment flexibility, and why printing in place reduces transport, crane, labor, and erection costs compared to factory precast approaches. He outlines typical material volumes (20–30 tons for a one-story house), weather limitations similar to masonry, and the company’s specialized mortar-like mix with additives and fiberglass for strength and shrinkage control. Kirill details seismic reinforcement using vertical and horizontal rebar with self-compacting concrete infill, waterproofing via thick concrete walls plus paint, and insulation using internal cavities filled with perlite to meet H1 requirements. The discussion also covers recyclability and life-cycle carbon claims, durability and comfort benefits (thermal mass, acoustics, fire and flood resilience), market adoption challenges, and the design freedom of curved, cost-neutral geometries in printed walls. Links: https://amcrete.co.nz/
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