Published October 10, 2024
| Version v1
Publication
Parametric Programming of 3D Printed Curved Walls for Cost-Efficient Building Design
Description
3D-printed construction allows elaborating building elements with diverse shapes that are digitally controlled. This paper
exposes the modeling of 3D-printed curved walls through parametric programming in building information modeling (BIM) in order to
support a cost-efficient building design. The advantage of using curved walls is based on the possibility of reducing their thickness with
respect to straight walls of similar length given their higher resistance to overturning forces. The programming developed here can
propose a considerable set of solutions using curved walls for a rectangular enclosure of dimensions given by the user. A case study
for a vehicle sale pavilion is shown, for which a set of 1,600 solutions with curved walls of different curvature angles and lengths is
generated and subsequently analyzed. From this analysis, those models with lower material consumption and execution time are selected
to be more thoroughly studied in the design process. Thus, a novel strategy is provided to researchers and practitioners for developing
more efficient and expressive building designs based on 3D-printed construction. The most efficient solution identified in the example
reduces material consumption by 61%, with an estimated cost saving of 53%.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/163469
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/163469
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE