There are virtually no jobs that won't go the way of automation.

<<http://www.usc.edu/uscnews/story.php?id=10009>>

Home, Sweet Home  
   Backed by a German materials company, a USC engineer intends to build
a 2,000-square-foot house in 24 hours. The automated process, which can
build full-scale walls, may be tested next year.   
Behrokh Khoshnevis has been developing his automated house-building
process, called “Contour Crafting,” for more than a year. 
Photo/Eric Mankin

By Eric Mankin 

Degussa AG, one of the world’s largest manufacturers and suppliers of
construction materials, will collaborate in the development of a USC
computer-controlled system designed to automatically “print out”
full-size houses in hours. 

Funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation, Behrokh
Khoshnevis of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering’s Information
Sciences Institute has been developing his automated house-building
process, called “Contour Crafting,” for more than a year. 

Khoshnevis believes his system will be able to construct a full-size,
2,000- square-foot house with utilities embedded in 24 hours. He now has
a working machine that can build full-scale walls and is hoping to
actually construct his first house in early 2005. 

Contour Crafting uses crane- or gantry-mounted nozzles, from which
building material - concrete, in the prototype now operating in his
laboratory - comes out at a constant rate. 

Moveable trowels surrounding the nozzle mold the concrete into the
desired shape, as the nozzle moves over the work. 

Khoshnevis demonstrated the idea to Degussa executives at a meeting at
the firm’s Düsseldorf headquarters. 

The demonstration was deemed “impressive” by Gerhard Albrecht, head of
divisional research and technology transfer for Admixture, a Degussa
specialty materials subsidiary. 

“It is our belief that your [Contour Crafting] concept will be a quantum
leap in modern construction industry,” wrote Albrecht, in a subsequent
letter. “Therefore, we are ready to do research in our own Degussa R&D
departments to develop and provide construction materials that are
serviceable and fitted for the special building conditions of the CC
technology. 

“Degussa not only has at its disposal a wide range of construction
chemicals which will be tested with regard to their qualification and
applicability for special CC cement formulations, but is also ready to
develop special new construction chemicals in our own R&D labs fitted for
the CC process," Albrecht continued. 

Khoshnevis is now perfecting a system to mix such materials continuously
in industrial quantities right at the Contour Crafting nozzle, “the way a
spider makes silk to build a web.” 

“No company in the world is better able to bridge the gap between
engineering idea and commercial practice than Degussa,” Khoshnevis said.
“With their help, I believe I will be able to show the world an instant
house early next year.” 
 

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