EarthWorks
As the rate of global, rapid urbanization continues to grow, researchers and practitioners in Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) are being pushed to explore automation as a means of accelerating the development of new housing and infrastructure. According to the UN Sustainable Development Goals, 90,000 new units of housing will need to be produced each day to meet 2050 global urban housing demand. This goal is radically infeasible with existing construction practice and, if accomplished with currently conventional systems, would significantly increase the climate impact. The construction industry is contributing 11% of global annual carbon emissions, a number projected to grow over the next 50 years. Eight percent of this impact is a direct effect of cement production for concrete, currently the world’s most ubiquitous building material. To address the twofold challenge of rapid urbanization and the climate impact of growing cities, novel systems must be developed to minimize the use of concrete in new construction with globally scalable construction automation technologies. There is an extensive body of research illustrating methods for material reduction in concrete structures through shape optimization; however, fabricating shaped optimized structural elements remains a critical challenge.
We have created a novel system 3D printing earth as formwork for reinforced concrete. Using additive manufacturing, soil, often viewed as waste on a construction site, can be leveraged to produce infinitely recyclable formwork for mass-customized, shape-optimized, and structural elements. Doing so allows the construction of reinforced concrete buildings with more than 50% less concrete, as validated in years of academic research by the founders. By reducing material usage, carbon impact and cost are also drastically reduced. In addition, the additive manufacturing technology used is far faster than conventional construction practice and allows for greater design freedom to tailor buildings to specific climates and communities needs. Given the direct process of sending a design to a fabrication robot, we do not incur the massive costs typical of redesigning basic building systems for different projects. A further advantage of our hybrid system of 3D printing earth to produce conventional concrete structures is that the end result can be directly code compliant, unlike all other existing additive manufacturing strategies for the architectural scale. Finally, the 3D-printed EarthWork can be directly cycled back into the printing system to produce new molds for concrete elements, making it the first truly circular/ infinitely reusable concrete formwork fabrication system we are aware of.
Every human requires shelter, and nearly every community is beginning to experience the impact of climate change while also experiencing rapid urbanization. Faced with this reality, our solution could change the lives of many people and cities worldwide over the next century.
Around 70% of the world’s population lives in structures that are at least partially constructed from concrete. At the same time, about 30% of the world’s population also lives and works in structures partially made from earth. These structures, both concrete, and earth, exist on every continent. For example, in Germany alone, 50 million people live in earthen buildings. Providing a faster way to build homes and infrastructure that also lowers cost and climate impact through material savings has the potential to benefit everyone.
In Southern California, where our full-scale research development is currently underway, there is a need for housing that is quick to build, affordable, multistory and resilient to fire. Wildfires have destroyed large portions of California’s housing stock in increasingly urban settings, replacing these structures with buildings made from hybrid concrete and earth systems like those supplied by EarthWorks is an excellent value proposition both for communities and the planet.
Our team includes experts in large-scale additive manufacturing, material science, structural engineering, and building energy performance modeling. Combining and leveraging this deep well of experience is what allowed us to make EarthWorks a reality in the first place. In addition,
Our founder, Alexander Curth, has worked in the Additive Manufacturing industry for over 10 years and is completing a PhD in the Design and Computation group in MIT’s Architecture Department. Previously he received a Master of Architecture degree from UC Berkeley. He also runs a consulting company (Element R&D) that successfully deploys material savings strategies through computational design for aluminum facade systems on skyscrapers.
The research team includes MIT Architecture and Structural Engineering Professor Caitlin Mueller and University of Virginia Engineering Professor Moh Ismail, both leaders in the field of low carbon structural design. In addition, PhD students working on building energy performance and building envelope design are contributing to the academic side of the project. With this set of technical expertise and industry experience, and connection, we are well-positioned to scale quickly.
The current project is also supported by Lynda Weinman, a successful tech entrepreneur who created Lynda.com. She has provided grants and a large warehouse in California to scale the research to market.
- Reduce emissions from multifamily housing during construction, operation, and end-of-life while addressing barriers to local adoption.
- United States
- Prototype: A venture or organization building and testing its product, service, or business model, but which is not yet serving anyone
Multiple full-scale building elements have been manufactured and tested. These elements have been sized for multistory residential construction, the most pressing area for development in global construction.
The solution is in the prototyping stage, full-scale building elements have been produced. However, none are currently part of inhabited structures.
To scale EarthWorks to a market-ready building technology requires capital and business guidance. Construction, especially in the US, is extremely expensive. While our system vastly reduces many construction-associated costs, building and testing full-scale wall and floor systems requires space, money, and labor. We have demonstrated a “minimum viable product” but require more business, legal and financial resources to implement such products in buildings that meet building code and can be permanently inhabited. Navigating the design and construction industry requires legal guidance and expertise to establish government approval for new construction systems. Solve offers opportunities to connect with experts who can guide our developments and could help us establish a robust business model that will attract larger funding sources.
- Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
- Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Legal or Regulatory Matters
EarthWorks is a novel building system currently under review for a patent.
Our one year goal is to produce a full scale, multi-story housing prototype. We are working towards completing the first section of this building over the summer.
Our five-year goals are to produce multiple, to building code, housing units that are inhabited. These could be in California, Mexico or India where we have construction industry partners.
Both of these goals require establishing a company with multiple employees and a robust business model for interacting with major players in the global construction industry. (What we need Solve's help with!)
- 3. Good Health and Well-being
- 8. Decent Work and Economic Growth
- 9. Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure
- 10. Reduced Inequalities
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- 12. Responsible Consumption and Production
- 15. Life on Land
- A new technology
We have produced and tested multiple full-scale building elements for multistory residential construction.
- Imaging and Sensor Technology
- Manufacturing Technology
- Materials Science
- Robotics and Drones
- Software and Mobile Applications
- United States
- United States
- For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
From a design perspective, EarthWorks has the potential to be a democratizing technology that allows communities to build what they want the way they want. This is a major shift from current industry practice and one that has the potential to be far more equitable. Democratization and access to affordable housing continue to be a driving force behind our work. The development of this project has included a wide range of students and supporters and will continue to be home to a diverse group of people as we scale. There is no way to build for everyone without engaging people from all backgrounds for their input and guidance.
We don't have one. We are considering a software as service approach to enable existing companies to license our technology or a larger scale effort to build a construction company that does the actual work of producing buildings.
- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
We would love guidance on this topic as we are in the early stages of developing a business model.
We secured $100,000 in research funding from a technology company founder to initiate the research last year. Moving forward, investment could come from investors in the real estate development and construction industries as well as from large government grants for infrastructure renewal. With nearly 10 years of experience in the architectural scale additive manufacturing space (essentially since the beginning), our founder is well positioned and connected to plug into growing monetary investment in large-scale 3D printing technologies.