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Japan has officially approved Serendix’s O House, the first two-story 3D-printed home to pass its rigorous seismic building codes.
Technology
1 min read

Japan has officially approved Serendix’s O House, the first two-story 3D-printed home to pass its rigorous seismic building codes.

Serendix
Serendix

Hardware

Originally reported by en.clickpetroleoegas.com.br

Japan has officially approved Serendix’s O House, the first two-story 3D-printed home to pass its rigorous seismic building codes. Standing 7 meters tall, the 50 sqm structure uses curved geometry and hybrid reinforced concrete to withstand severe earthquakes. This certification validates 3D concrete printing as a permanent housing solution, requiring only 4 operators. This systemic shift proves automation can meet the world’s strictest structural standards for urban density. 🏠🏗️🇯🇵 #3DPrinting #ConstructionTech #Seismic #Serendix

How This Connects

3 related events
  1. Company story

    Serendix and the University of Tokyo completed structural experiments on 3D-printed mortar components to move from non-structural formwork to self-supporting status.

  2. This article

    Japan has officially approved Serendix’s O House, the first two-story 3D-printed home to pass its rigorous seismic building codes.

  3. Company story

    Japan officially approved its first two-story 3D printed home, a 50-square-meter structure by Kizuki and Serendix that meets the strict 1981 New Anti-seismic Structure Standard.

  4. Company story

    Serendix has launched 3D printed housing kits for 3.3 million JPY, decentralizing construction to address labor shortages.