Just heard about this at a gathering, it seems really useful in certain ways:
1) let's say you want to do adobe/cob construction but don't have a large community with available time to work on it for a period of several months--well, you sic your 3d printer on the task, it puts down a layer, goes into power-save mode, waits for it to dry, spritzes it with
water if it's drying too fast and in danger of cracking, then a week later puts down another layer, etc.
2) it would create shelters for people trying to transition from the
city to the country so they'd have a place to move into
3) it could help places like old abandoned mill towns to revitalize without needing to attract standard developers whose goals would be more profit-oriented and, usually, less about planet and people.
Problems/potential problems:
1) It needs a steady power source--would PV be
enough? a gas generator?
2) cost of building the printer--ecological cost and monetary--I don't know, didn't see info on WASP's site
3) would it work in absolutely any situation/climate/context?
4) doesn't build community the way communal natural building does (requiring people to work together, and to slow down).
What do you think?
Next question, how does this compare to Open Source Ecology's thingy that spits out bricks?
From what I know, the latter would be useful and fast, and the only drawback is you still have to put the bricks together, and that can take a lot of labor and time. The cost of the machine also I Think would be much lower than the printer. What do others think?