Saudi-based Dar Al Arkan builds world’s tallest 3D-printed villa
Saudi real estate developer, Dar Al Arkan, has completed the world’s tallest 3D printed building in Riyadh using a COBOD 3D construction printer.
The 3-storey, 9.9-meter-tall, 330 square meters (sqm) villa was built with 3D printable concrete created using low-cost local materials in 26 days and full compliance with building codes.
It is equipped with smart controls and has 9 solar panels on the roof, which generate enough electricity to power many of the villa’s systems, including lighting and heating.
“Our efforts are focused on developing the kingdom’s real estate sector by integrating the latest trends and technologies, drawn from global best practices to enhance our industry locally and deliver on the objectives of vision 2030. The introduction of 3D construction printing enables us to focus on greater flexibility of design, strengthen productivity and achieve higher cost efficiency.”
“The project was executed using local materials and the D.fab solution developed by Cemex and COBOD. This solution allows COBOD customers to use 99 percent local and inexpensive materials, while only relying on one percent sourced from a central location. Also, heat-reflecting nanotechnology was used for painting the exterior walls, which makes the villa up to 40 percent more heat-resistant than traditional buildings,” COBOD said in a statement.
Mr. Henrik Lund-Nielsen, Founder & General Manager of COBOD stated that “The 3-storey villa from Dar Al Arakan is representing state of art of the 3D construction printing industry both in terms of size and quality and in many other ways. The villa demonstrates the capabilities of the technology regarding scale, speed, use of cheap local materials and innovative solutions. Our technology delivers the fastest construction method in the world, and when this is combined with low-cost locally made concrete a winning formula has been established.”
The Denmark-headquartered COBOD is privately owned by General Electric, CEMEX, Holcim and PERI as key shareholders, and its partners include Dar Al Arkan (Saudi Arabia), L&T Construction (India), JGC (Japan), Siam Cement (Thailand) and Orascom (Egypt).
Related: Saudi’s Dar Al Arkan lists its international unit on London Stock Exchange