Technology
Fast nearing completion, the 3D Post Office on Cambridge Road, Bengaluru. (Photo credit: Vishnu Anand).
India’s first post office building, constructed using 3-D printing technology, is fast nearing completion on Bengaluru’s Cambridge Road.
When completed, it will house the Halasuru Bazaar Post Office — in a 1,100 square feet facility.
Being undertaken by Larsen and Toubro (L&T), the total construction cost is likely to be around Rs 23 lakh — about 30-40 per cent cheaper than a structure built in the conventional way.
If the pilot 3-D printed post office is a success, the postal department plans on extending this to 400 more locations which are hitherto unserved by postal services.
L&T has been among earliest major construction companies in India to embrace 3-D printing technology, aiming to complete projects, faster, at lower cost.
Using a large format concrete 3-D printer sourced from Denmark-based 3D construction equipment maker Cobod, they “printed” a small one-storied structure using locally sourced 3-D printable concrete mix in November 2019 as a learning exercise.
The company went on to construct a 2-storeyed 65 sqm (650 sqft) building at its Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu facility. The structure was ‘printed’ in 106 hours.
First 3-D Printed Temple
In Siddipet, in Telangana state, another interesting building project has been launched: India’s first 3-D-printed temple for the Charvitha Meadows gated community.
The work is being undertaken by Apsuja Infratech with Simpliforge Creations. In March this year, Simpliforge printed and built, on the same site, a prototype bridge within just two hours — with designs developed by the International Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) , Hyderabad.
The company made headlines in construction circles, 2022, when it launched what was claimed to be India’s largest robotic 3-D printer, capable of crafting structures up to 7 metres in size.
Another early mover in 3-D printed construction is Tvasta, a startup co-founded by alumni of IIT Madras who graduated in 2016, after having completed a final year project in 3-D printing.
In 2018 they put up arguably India’s first 3-D structure in the IIT Campus and two years later, completed a 1 BHK house nearby within 21 days.
Watch a YouTube video showing the full Tvasta process of building the 3-D house.
Other IITs are also into this technology: In a collaboration with a Belgium based 3-D Printer startup Deltasys E-Forming, IIT Guwahati is developing a building printer that uses construction waste as its raw material.
The government-driven Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) has target to build of three crore houses by 2024: To reach an ambitious target like this, 3-D printed structures might be the only viable option.
These Indian initiatives in harnessing 3-D printing for civil construction are the crest of a global wave, which sees in this technology, the potential to put up homes and other facilities, faster and cheaper than with traditional practice, even while using recycled and eco-friendly materials.
A Building Industry Association show earlier this month in the US, highlighted the fact that the modular techniques possible with 3-D printing will obviate the need for on-site carpenters, welders and other tradespersons on the building site.
Their conclusion: 3-D printing is now a disruptive technology in the building industry that has legs and is gaining traction — a small market that is set to explode.
For the companies and clients in India who are pioneering 3-D printed construction, it is an idea whose time has come.