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The Robots are here

The 3D Printing industry is changing everyday. The printer is leaving the box and are coming to us. Similar to my post about the bees and the spiders, the 3D Printer at MX3D is the robot, the robot is the printer. MX3D is using robots to print a bridge over water in the center of Amsterdam. Joris Laarman’s design is being created, not in the constraints of a typical 3D Printer but it is going onsite and outside the box.

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Tim Geurtjens, CTO MX3D:
“What distinguishes our technology from traditional 3D printing methods is that we work according to the ‘Printing Outside the box’ principle. By printing with 6-axis industrial robots, we are no longer limited to a square box in which everything happens. Printing a functional, life-size bridge is of course the ideal way to showcase the endless possibilities of this technique.”

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The bridge will be designed by Joris Laarman. That process using new Autodesk software will be a research project in itself. It will sync with the technical development and take into account the location. The project is a collaboration between MX3D, design software company Autodesk, construction company Heijmans and many others.

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Many of our clients are looking forward to the time when buildings will be 3D Printed, not just concrete boxes, but real buildings with designs that are not limited to the current construction techniques, cheaper and faster. I think that MX3D has brought us one step closer to that dream. Visit MX3D Bridge for the whole story and videos illustrating the actual process.

I look forward to hear your thoughts. – Roger

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Capturing reality: Capture Craft and Microsol Resources fabricate a scale replica of Philadelphia landmark.

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“Reality capture” is a term that is gaining a foothold in many more industries these days. The applications of creating a high definition 3D mesh of a real world element are expanding significantly. The Smithsonian recently showcased its work in digitizing parts of their collection on http://3d.si.edu and wowed the industry with examples geared towards research, analysis, and preservation. Optimized for the Web, mobile or 3D printing / fabbing, reality capture is an impressive new tool making art, artifacts, and architecture more accessible.

 

As a case study and proof of concept for a confidential museum client the Philadelphia start-up named Capture Craft created a high resolution 3D capture of part of the Swan memorial fountain at Logan Square in Philadelphia. The museum is interested in expanding their reach to the public around the world and with the talents of the Capture Craft Company they will be able to do that. By digitally capturing high resolution 3D models of their collections that are on display and also in storage, the museum will be able to peak the curiosity of potential visitors, impress their members and provide access to an expansive virtual collection to researchers around the world.

 

The turtle at the Swan Memorial Fountain was good example of Capture Craft’s capabilities. Situated at the center of Logan Circle on Benjamin Franklin Parkway in downtown Philadelphia, the fountain by Alexander Stirling Calder and designed with architect Wilson Eyre, memorializes Dr. Wilson Cary Swann, founder of the Philadelphia Fountain Society.

 

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Capture Craft’s founder, Craig Barbieri has been working with software maker Autodesk on the software tools and methods to create high definition 3D mesh models. Beginning with high resolution cameras, lenses, and special lighting requirements, the Capture Craft team captured images at multiple elevations, 360° around the sculpted turtle that spouts water toward the 25-50-foot geyser at the fountain’s center. About 100 high resolution photographs are then processed and fed into specialized servers which use Autodesk’s algorithms to reconstruct the sculpture in 3 dimensions, with an accuracy rivaling other known methods. Once the initial 3d model is created, its coordinates are then set to real-world scale and cleaned of any outlying geometry. The result is a 3D mesh model on which you can see an amazing level of 3D detail, including the sculptor’s tool marks.

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Note the sculptor’s tool marks in the center of this image.

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 Appearing left to right, Photo, Surface model, Mesh model, Textured mesh model

 

Once complete, Capture Craft reached out to Roger Liucci of Microsol Resources, the preeminent New York 3D-printing Master, to have the model of the turtle 3D printed on their latest machine. Microsol Resources has been in the 3D printing business for almost 10 years, and has a number of different 3D print technologies in their New York office. Working with clients such as Cesar Pelli (NY, CT), Morphosis (NY), SHoP Architects (NY). Microsol Resources was excited to print this high-resolution model in color on their new 3D Systems ProJet 660 3D Printer. Once a size was chosen the machine went to work and the results were fantastic! When not on display to potential new clients the replicated turtle sculpture is showcased in the Capture Craft office in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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1/12th scale 3D Print of the Swann Memorial Fountain Turtle sculpture

 

For more information about the Capture Craft Company, contact Craig Barbieri at Craig@CaptureCraftCo.com

 

For more information about 3D printing contact Roger Liucci at Microsol Resources (888) 768-7568

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