40 pointsby sohkamyung11 hours ago4 comments
  • KevinMS3 hours ago
    What I'm seeing is the organic design that 3d printing offers and the scaling strength of whatever material they have to use makes one ugly structure. If they could have made it finely detailed and "lacey" like small 3d models can achieve it would have looked really cool.
  • xnx9 hours ago
    Printed in smaller pieces then assembled. Still cool, but not what the headline implies. Ikon has printed structures taller than the pieces of this building.
    • giwook7 hours ago
      I think the headline is fine tbh.

      Ikon is doing some pretty cool things and perhaps there's a different nomenclature for 3D printing something as one piece (without any seams or assembly) but is something any less 3D-printed because it was printed in multiple pieces versus a single piece?

      • jstanley6 hours ago
        I think yes it is less 3d-printed if it is assembled out of multiple pieces.

        How small would the pieces have to be before you say it's not a 3d-printed building? Is a building made out of 3d-printed bricks a 3d-printed building or are the bricks 3d-printed but the building not?

        The limit as piece size tends to zero is that 3d-printed-ness tends to 0.

        • QuantumNomad_4 hours ago
          I wonder what happens if we go in the other direction.

          Instead of printing a single building as one piece, what if we print a whole city block as a single piece. Are those buildings 3d-printed then, or are they just part of a 3d-printed bigger whole? Asking seriously btw.

          • NooneAtAll33 hours ago
            "how complex is your apartment complex?"
  • turbostar11 hours ago
    Inside this building is a portal to other important areas. I’m sure of it.
  • swiftcoder4 hours ago
    Would be really interested to know what the building is actually for. just a tech demo? or does it have a real use?