4 Construction AM · Construction 3D companies in the additive manufacturing ecosystem tracked by AMPulse. Browse profiles, funding rounds, and technology details.
Updated
Construction 3D (MEX-3DCP) is a metal additive manufacturing process that fuses metal feedstock (powder or wire) layer-by-layer using a directed energy source. AMPulse tracks 4 companies using Construction 3D as a core technology, ranked below by total funding raised.
Typical materials: common metal AM alloys including titanium, stainless steel, aluminum, and nickel superalloys. Common applications: aerospace, medical, tooling, automotive, and defense.
Polyuse develops construction 3D printers for the Japanese construction and civil engineering industry.
A construction tech startup pioneering the 'mortgage-free' era by developing and mass-producing 3D-printed residential houses that can be built in less than 24-48 hours at the price of a car.
Develops spray-based 3D concrete printing systems for on-site construction of reinforced concrete structures using robotics and simulation.
Provides 3D concrete printing (3DCP) services for construction and infrastructure projects using proprietary high-durability concrete formulations.
A metal additive manufacturing process that fuses metal feedstock (powder or wire) layer-by-layer using a directed energy source.
Based on funding data tracked by AMPulse as of 2026-06, the top Construction 3D companies include Polyuse, Serendix Corporation, Shimizu Corporation, and AIZAWA Concrete Corp.. Full list of 4 tracked companies available on this page.
Construction 3D commonly works with common metal AM alloys including titanium, stainless steel, aluminum, and nickel superalloys.
Primary applications for Construction 3D include aerospace, medical, tooling, automotive, and defense.