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Urban green habitat 3D-Printed with multiple recycled filaments

ByLeslie Langnau|August 1, 2019

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BigRep, a global leader in large-format 3D printing launched a fully 3D-printed urban green habitat installation using multiple, recycled plastic-based filaments – the GENESIS Eco Screen.

Addressing some of the biggest environmental challenges such as plastic waste, overconsumption of energy and other resources, rapidly deteriorating biodiversity and urbanization, the installation is a prototype in urban architecture and a showcase in Additive Manufacturing (AM) of a scalable, city-developing circular economy.

It features innovations made possible by using custom-made generative design algorithms and the large, serial production 3D printers (FFF) by BigRep.

The GENESIS Eco Screen will feature an embedded water and drainage system for plants and insect habitats, including a shelter for solitary bees. Measuring 4 by 4 meters, the GENESIS Eco Screen is reminiscent of a massive root system, and is printed using multiple filaments – consisting of BigRep PETG and BASF Innofil3D rPET made of 100% recycled PET printed on four large-scale BigRep ONE printers. The GENESIS Eco Screen is scheduled for completion in late August and will be on display in downtown Berlin.

创世纪环保屏幕将展出Fiction Forum exhibition center – the site of a now demolished East German border control station that left a gap between East and West.

小说论坛举办的Federal Government’s Center of Excellence for the Cultural and Creative Industries on behalf of the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy. From August to October, it presents innovative approaches from the cultural and creative industries.

BigRep CIO and NOWLAB Managing Director Daniel Büning says, “Disruptive technologies such as 3D printing are key to solving some of the world’s biggest problems. We want to deliver groundbreaking innovation to maximize the potential of AM, thereby creating entirely new applications. With this project, we are introducing a new and truly sustainable manufacturing protocol to the manufacturing of polymer objects using multiple pre-used plastic materials. The GENESIS Eco Screen shows how society can develop a greener future – with circular economy solutions that are sustainable, local, modular and collaborative.“

Circular economy is aimed at minimizing waste by closing the gap between resource input, waste, emissions and energy usage. This is achieved by reducing consumption and material usage. Set up at Fiction Forum as a closed loop process, the PET bottles are recycled as an input material and 3D printed for an innovative, yet hands-on, showcase for production to demonstrate this approach.

At the Thaersaal, the public can learn more about this closed loop process in an exhibit detailing the five steps turning waste into high-tech printing material: First, used PET-bottles are delivered to a collection point, cleaned and pre-processed for the Dual Axel Shredder, a machine designed by the Germany company raw paradise. It processes the plastic into printable raw material for the actual filaments that are produced with a filament extruder.

The filament is a long strand, only 2,75 mm in diameter that looks like a cable. Coiled on filament spools, one for each printer, it is fed into the large-format BigRep ONE printers – and so the printing process begins.

The GENESIS Eco Screen was created using some of the most advanced self-generating design algorithms and agent-based modeling. These algorithms and agents are intelligent tools, almost comparable to AI, capable of autonomously designing complex geometries with only a few pre-set parameters. For the GENESIS Eco Screen, these included, for example, a data analysis of the sun exposure across the installation in order to be able to optimize the diameter of the 3D-printed “branches” and the creation of the shading features and plant positioning accordingly.

BigRep GmbH
www.bigrep.com


Filed Under:3D printing • additive manufacturing • stereolithography
Tagged With:bigrep

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