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A robot can build this $300,000 home in four months

Branch Technology will soon 3D-print the prototype of a home designed by the architecture firm WATG Urban in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Branch Technology will complete its prototype of a home using 3D printers in late fall at Chattanooga State Community College, the director of sales, David Fuehrer, told Business Insider.

Freeform Home Design Challenge, a competition to imagine the future of 3D-printed home construction.

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Curve Appeal will span 1,000 square feet, and will feature a bedroom, bathroom, and living room.

To build it, Branch's system will first turn WATG’s design into code that the 3D printers can read.

Unlike traditional 3D printers that build layer-by-layer, Branch’s machines will create lattices, which they will then fill with thousands of pounds of liquid foam and concrete that hardens.

Inside Branch's 40,000-square-foot facility, four bots will create the panels that will eventually be fastened together.

Fuehrer said Branch’s method will make homes that are three to four times stronger than typical wood construction.

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The construction process will also produce less waste than traditional homebuilding, because the machines will print only the necessary parts, he said.

The home’s parts will then be shipped on-site, and in under three weeks, a construction crew will assemble the structure. Lastly, the team will add finishing touches, like plumbing and appliances.

Branch estimates that the prototype will cost $300 to $400 per square foot to build, but plans to get that price down before it starts selling homes.

Once complete, Branch will gift the home to the college, which will use it for classes.

The company believes that 3D printing represents the future of housing construction, because the process is extremely efficient.

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Fuehrer added that 3D printers could be especially useful for building extraterrestrial colonies. In 2017, NASA awarded Branch Technology $85,930 to develop methods for constructing habitats on Mars.

On Earth, the team eventually plans to start selling custom homes and commercial buildings, but it does not have an exact timeline yet.

"We want to push the envelope of what’s possible with 3D printing," Fuehrer said.

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