this post was submitted on 30 Apr 2025
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Your 3d printer doesn't have other utilities to accommodate. The printing is basically just the walls. Every other utility (Power, water, sanitary, HVAC, foundations, windows, doors, metal fabrications, networking etc) are all still done by people, all made with options made by other manufacturers.
Your printer also uses quick setting thermoplastic, not a concrete slurry that needs to set over the course of days instead of fractions of a second.
This and typical FDM printing are related, but truths about printing out a plastic trinket don't necessarily translate to large concrete structures.
Beat me to it. I was imagining the horror involved in wiring or plumbing such a space. Don't know much about HVAC, but there would be weird hot and cold spots in an oddly shaped structure.