
Each segment of the corridor-like structure is created separately using 3D-printing technology, and then assembled wherever needed, without requiring any additional framing or supports. SOM’s design team worked alongside U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory for this off-grid masterpiece. They claim it’s the world’s largest 3D-printed polymer structure, and they’re probably right. The shelter is a prototype made for the Additive Manufacturing Integrated Energy (AMIE), an initiative designed to spur innovations in self-sustaining renewable energy. This model is known as AMIE 1.0.
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The 3D-printed structure measures 38 feet long by 12 feet high by 12 feet wide, which is somewhere between the size of a large motorhome and that of a mobile home. AMIE 1.0 is designed to be a self-sustaining dwelling capable of generating its own power. The off-grid living space shares the energy with a companion vehicle (which is also created with 3D-printed parts) via electromagnetic fields. Together, the pair represent what is possible for sustainable electricity generation, storage, and use.

SOM—also known as Skidmore, Owings and Merrill—is a global firm dating back to 1936. As the years have passed, the agency has evolved to keep up, incorporating the latest technological advances into their projects. The world of 3D-printed architecture is certainly booming, and the modular nature of 3D construction makes it an ideal match for off-grid shelter solutions.
AMIE 1.0 was displayed at the International Builders’ Show in Las Vegas, which ended Jan. 21, 2016.
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