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100 Year Old Swiss company builds homes with Robots! 

Belinda Carr
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Renggli, a 100 year old firm in Switzerland, builds high-performance, energy-efficient, modular structures. They use CNCs, suction cup lifts, robotic saws, tilting tables, gantry cranes and more.
Link to my podcast channel: / belindacarrpodcast
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Chapters
0:00 Introduction
0:45 Platform System
2:02 CNC Machine
3:23 Hundegger Saw
4:16 Butterfly Table
5:00 Gantry System
6:36 Pros
8:45 Sponsorship
9:41 Cons
11:35 Conclusion
The first machine is this platform system adopted from the automotive industry. Forklifts load drywall, timber, sheathing and other large materials onto this base. They are separated into categories and stored on these shelving racks. As material is needed inside the factory, it is automatically retrieved from these shelves and carried down this highway system. They also have a huge storage facility with tagged lumber and engineered wood waiting to be used. Such an advanced construction facility needs highly detailed BIM models to drive their process. BIM stands for Building Information Modeling. Digital 3D models are loaded with information like the size and location of every part and piece.
The second robot used is a CNC machine which stands for computer numerical control. Gypsum boards and wood panels are lifted from the shelving racks and brought to these tables. They slide into the sealed off CNC machine and are cut with router bits. Data from BIM models dictates the dimensions of each piece and the location of electrical outlets and plumbing. When the cuts are complete, the table slides out. Suction cups carefully lift the pieces to another platform.
The third machine is an advanced Hundegger saw. Large pieces of wood, some 40 feet in length, are fed into this fully automated machine. It can cut wood in 5 axes as well as drill screw holes, cut notches, mortise and tenon joints and punctures for electrical and plumbing. Once again, data from BIM models dictates the cuts. Because precision is so important in off site construction,
The fourth type of machine is a butterfly table. Workers build wall, ceiling and floor panels on these tables by attaching the milled glulams, sheathing and drywall. When it’s time to work on the opposite side of the panel, the tables flip 90 or 180 degrees with hydraulic lifts. It takes just 90 seconds to flip these tables over and safely lower them on the opposite side.
The fifth machine is a gantry crane system that spans the entire length of the factory. It carries building panels from one assembly table to another. Workers add thick mineral wool insulation in the stud bays and a layer of wood fiber insulation on the exterior faces. They also attach drywall to the interior faces with a nail gun. Plastic tubing for wires is also installed in the wall panels.
Renggli is able to build panels faster and better. They don’t have to worry about exposure to rain, snow and other elements. Another advantage is the ability to hire older and more experienced workers in the factory since indoor working conditions are not as harsh. They are also able to minimize waste because of careful planning and execution. The final advantage is the sustainability of wood construction.
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• Renggli Modulhaus VISI...
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#prefab #modular #robotics #construction #architecture

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7 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 134   
@RenggliAG
@RenggliAG Год назад
THANK YOU Belinda for your visit at our factory premises and your interesting video. We appreciate it a lot! 👏🏻
@leonmilner9994
@leonmilner9994 Год назад
AcQbuilt in Alberta Canada also uses automated screwing machines - you could check out their factory too. Most of the Cons you listed don't seem bad to me. And most aren't a problem with modular construction, but just with the industry. People don't need custom things - if they are substantially better quality for similar or lower prices - people will buy them. As demonstrated in almost every other industry - and by the fact that people live in extremely similar condos/cookie cutter suburb homes/etc. already. These approaches will continue to grow as we place more value on energy efficiency, and phase out the ability to just waste vast amounts of energy in a home and still be comfortable.
@valdius85
@valdius85 Год назад
There are levers of modularity. Right now it is very low, which makes no sense to me as an engineer.
@leonmilner9994
@leonmilner9994 Год назад
@@valdius85 Yeah for sure - another area which is fairly modular is modular homes haha. (Also known as mobile homes or trailers.) Many of these are built each year in factories and shipped out to folks!
@UnbreakableM1nd
@UnbreakableM1nd Год назад
I have toured ACQbuilt, they are not close to the quality of this Swiss plant. The stud material used at ACQbuilt is LSL, not Glulam. The workmanship was also not as good. And a lot of the yard storage are just sitting in the open without plastic wrapping.
@leonmilner9994
@leonmilner9994 Год назад
@@UnbreakableM1nd Good to know! I would expect European builds to be better than North America - but ACQbuilt can adjust to the building code as it changes as well.
@UnbreakableM1nd
@UnbreakableM1nd Год назад
@@leonmilner9994 I think ACQBuilt has done as well as they possibly could. The problem in Canada is the residential building market is it’s all over the place, sort of like the wild west. And Canadians love their unsustainable single family homes, which is the main market for ACQbuilt. Unfortunately it’s hard to make a profit in this sector, so it’s always a race to the bottom.
@whiteknightcat
@whiteknightcat Год назад
Amazing technology. And thank you so much for this video. I was starting to suffer withdrawal after two months without Belinda!
@djpazzy
@djpazzy Год назад
Great channel, great content. I find your videos very informative. Keep up the good work.
@kevinaylward3677
@kevinaylward3677 Год назад
agreed...
@RogierYou
@RogierYou Год назад
Only the Swiss can be so organized!
@ziggarillo
@ziggarillo Год назад
The German Huf Hause company does this too.
@budgetaudiophilelife-long5461
🤗👍 BELINDA,THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS JOURNEY FOR US 🤗 HOPEFULLY AN INCITE TO THE FUTURE HERE 😎💚💚💚
@mikealfieri641
@mikealfieri641 Год назад
Glad I found this channel! Wonderful video as always.
@rashkavar
@rashkavar Год назад
Very interesting. For anyone who's curious about the sustainable logging idea, have a look at British Columbia's logging industry. Our forestry industry uses clearcutting techniques that reserve certain ecologically significant trees (those near rivers and streams to manage erosion, those that are notably taller than average for predatory birds, etc) and monitors them enough to ensure that the trees they plant grow up good and strong...they have a vested interest in this because somewhere between 20 and 80 years from now, they'll be back to do the same thing all over again. (Depends what they're planting and what the nutrition conditions are like. Most of the forests around where I live are what are called second growth forests, meaning the original forests were cut down long enough ago that the forests we have now look pretty much like normal forests even though they're managed woodlots. (And currently, as far as I know, wood construction is actually the best means we have of carbon sequestration. There's timber frame buildings built upwards of a century ago that have fully grown forests sitting where the trees that got cut down once stood. In nature, all those logged trees would have rotted away, but by drying them out and sticking them in a waterproof shell (that is to say, making them into a house) the wood doesn't rot and thus doesn't release its carbon back into the atmosphere. We're working on much more advanced tech, yes, but it'll be a while yet before we can manage those systems on a scale that matches the combined efforts of forests, and the forestry and construction industries.
@darrellturner560
@darrellturner560 Год назад
Way back in the 1990s I worked as a chief estimator for 2 large construction companies. Both used modulated computerised systems. When I started with each company I found their systems way under utilised so set about trimming components to the bear minimum and improving the labour orders. In both cases I was able to reduce costs saving time and waste throughout the entire process. In doing so it also assisted the companies in offering cheaper customer specific alterations to standard models. By feeding the systems measurements I was able to produce competitive sale prices to the sales team of fully custom architectual design in less than a day. Be it slab or pier and beam construction (with site works added after geo inspection) without interferring with the daily out put of orders or standardised sales pricing. It is good to see people using technology in the construction industry as it should be for the greater benefits for individuals as well as society as a whole. Now I live in a under developed country where I see so much misunderstanding of engineering and design, so much waste, poor low grade materials and shoddy workmenship which all adds up to extra cost and heartache for the customer. Not to mention building collapse in natural disasters.
@dc-ic5lj
@dc-ic5lj Год назад
Your so lucky. That looks soo interesting.
@grahamastor4194
@grahamastor4194 Год назад
There's a company in the UK, Oakwrights, that makes Oak timber framed homes combined with a high quaility insulated panneling for walls and roofs; you should come check them out.
@andrewwatts1997
@andrewwatts1997 Год назад
If I had the money I would buy 10 of these factories and plant them all around The Netherlands. This is truly amazing !
@VastKn
@VastKn Год назад
If I had that much money I would buy 10 resorts and plant them around the world. This is truly amazing.
@KaceyGreen
@KaceyGreen Год назад
Impressive, thank you for this look at how it's done
@Danny_Boel
@Danny_Boel Год назад
0:50 wow , never saw sheets of plywood that big 😮
@chapablo
@chapablo Год назад
I don't know why your videos are not showing up on my feed, I had to pull up your channel to watch this. I hope that after watching a few, maybe the algorithm will bump you up again!
@bucknaked9234
@bucknaked9234 Год назад
Your work is brilliant. You are inspiring me to get my projects done.
@nK80
@nK80 Год назад
Great videos, thank you for your work! Keep making them :-) ❤
@lesallison9047
@lesallison9047 Год назад
Very interesting 👍. ✌♥️🇬🇧
@mikewysko2268
@mikewysko2268 Год назад
Fascinating. I thank you for giving us a tour of this production system.
@atulboruah6182
@atulboruah6182 Год назад
I'm so happy to see these construction by the help of you, whereas I'm also a civil contractor in India. Thank you Madam
@kevinmitchell3168
@kevinmitchell3168 Год назад
These buildings may be more expensive but they are going to be so much higher quality!
@09jt1
@09jt1 Год назад
Just lovely
@4star62
@4star62 Год назад
Thank you for an informative video!
@norm1124
@norm1124 Год назад
Love your visit to Switzerland 🇨🇭
@mrtopcat2
@mrtopcat2 Год назад
Fantastic! An off-topic side note if I may: so this means you visited Switzerland. What a beautiful country. The Alps are my favorite. Very well developed for tourism and fun while full of natural beauty. I hope you had a great time there. Best wishes and I love your channel. 🏡😻
@chriscragnotti7272
@chriscragnotti7272 Год назад
Fascinating! Love your videos!
@HYDROBLOKCOM
@HYDROBLOKCOM Год назад
Amazing, very impressive!
@fuzzzycomics2334
@fuzzzycomics2334 Год назад
Your channel is so cool. Thank you for all of this awesome information!
@manhardatta4721
@manhardatta4721 Год назад
Very interesting video, thanks Belinda.
@maurice3590
@maurice3590 Год назад
Amazing! Beeing from switzerland and not knowing about it is even more suprising to me, most modular and pre-fab wooden houses i heard of are produced in the northern countries or germany. Great i found that one! Just the mineralwool insulation is not my favorite, i like cork but that might be a personal choice... Thanks
@earlgreystoke3324
@earlgreystoke3324 Год назад
Excellent video!
@ohasis8331
@ohasis8331 Год назад
I especially liked the waste handling. One thing that really bugged me onsite was the disorganised clutter and trip hazards everywhere.
@m.zubairtanoli2358
@m.zubairtanoli2358 11 месяцев назад
Great channel And great work
@kevinmitchell3168
@kevinmitchell3168 Год назад
I love your channel! I hope you do more videos about automation!
@j3dwin
@j3dwin Год назад
9:01 A beautifully serene landscape with two AH-64 attack helicopters. Yeah, that's fine art worth investing in.
@basespeaker1
@basespeaker1 Год назад
Great video! Frank Loyd Wright would approve!
@pcatful
@pcatful Год назад
Hello Ms. Carr. Alwways great to see your videos! Switzerland building is insanely robust. It's very interesting that the BIM model is translated to automated construction--where generally it is used to make traditional working drawings for traditional construction.
@ljprep6250
@ljprep6250 Год назад
Many modular home builders and SIM factories in the US are utilizing the same CNC fabrication techniques as Renggli. I like it!
@thomas6502
@thomas6502 Год назад
I'm curious on the consumer side. We've lived in "traditional" places... and now we'd like to try some of these other options. Any guidance on how we can help on the consumer side? (I'm not even sure how to find places like this... or if this is something we have to play a more active role from earlier in the design and commissioning phase.) Any content helping bridge these interests would be appreciated. We're US based, California a little more specifically... but consider ourselves free agents (or at least aspire to be--if we're just fooling ourselves). 🙂 That said, thank you Belinda. We love your channel and appreciate that you share your skill this way. Please keep up the fantastic work.
@anthonymartin9672
@anthonymartin9672 11 месяцев назад
I think it is possible to nearly automate the construction industry. It is a matter of structural design. Whenever I build something I design it around the dimensions of the materials used, to minimize cuts and waste.
@m.zubairtanoli2358
@m.zubairtanoli2358 11 месяцев назад
I love this channel
@EngineerMikeF
@EngineerMikeF Год назад
I would be very interested to see the erection of these buildings to understand the connectivity structurally, electrically & plumbingly. FYI modularized construction has been around at least since WW2 when Henry Kaiser modularized Liberty Ship construction, & probably before.
@rjmun580
@rjmun580 Год назад
Many thousands of `prefabs` were built in the UK after WW2 as a short term measure to house people whose homes had been bombed. The electrical wiring was a pre-assembled harness known as the Octopus system.
@EngineerMikeF
@EngineerMikeF Год назад
@@rjmun580 Interesting, how were the "legs" tied in when the walls were assembled? Ceramic (c.1933) and later Bakelite wire notes we available in the U.S., were those used in the prefabs?
@MRSketch09
@MRSketch09 Год назад
Kinda neat, I guess its like knowing where all your tools are & what they do? Put into a manufacturing system.
@lennart637
@lennart637 Год назад
I spotted you on a NS Builder video on this facility and was awaiting this video
@disqusrubbish5467
@disqusrubbish5467 Год назад
Yes - this is what I meant when I said automating wood construction made more sense than 3-D printing or a robot laying blocks. They need to make it possible for architects to input plans into their system so they don't have to. But this is good.
@BenMitro
@BenMitro Год назад
Hopefully this is the prototype of things to come here in Australia too. Thanks Belinda, great presentation.
@candylord
@candylord Год назад
We already do stuff like this in Australia, it's not so popular ATM, but it's getting bigger Admittedly, it's not this complex, we still install our plywood on site, but alot of this is very familiar to me, at least. I believe we even use the same hundegger machine. Name of the company is sekisui house Australia
@BenMitro
@BenMitro Год назад
@@candylord Thanks! I will look them up.
@BenMitro
@BenMitro Год назад
@@candylord Damn, their website has little about the design and manufacturing of entire panels complete with conduits, insulation etc.
@candylord
@candylord Год назад
@@BenMitro yeah, unfortunately it's a little less advanced than what you see here. The wall panels themselves are built in the factory, but finishings and utilities and such are still done on site. I believe there's some regulations getting in the way of doing everything fully modular, but that's not my field
@BenMitro
@BenMitro Год назад
@@candylord The good side of that story is that there is, at least, a desire to move in that direction. It just makes so much sense - a controlled environment that allows for precision, efficiency, quality and alleviates the vagaries of weather. I'm not in the field, but I imagine slabs can be set up to accept such pre-fab panels using the same engineering drawings the pre-fab are made from. Getting the guys on-site to maintain high levels of accuracy might be a pain...but then again, site variations can be accommodate in the design and build to some degree. I suppose roofing and ceiling panels could also be made the same way? Not sure. Still a fascinating and inspiring idea.
@joshpino
@joshpino Год назад
Don’t have to go half way around the world to see this, Entekra in Modesto, CA is doing a great job with penalized construction.
@scottward1002
@scottward1002 Год назад
Are there any links on RU-vid to that company thank you
@joshpino
@joshpino Год назад
@@scottward1002 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-csQkKofxyB4.html
@paperheartzz
@paperheartzz Год назад
This is so cool! Is this kind of system for large objects, older than other kinds of robotic warehouses? Like for cars?
@soyuz281
@soyuz281 Год назад
House in an Ikea box. i like it.
@m.zubairtanoli2358
@m.zubairtanoli2358 11 месяцев назад
Very veryi formative videos
@im1dc
@im1dc Год назад
Wow, so impressive but no mention of final build cost at completion at site. Welcome back!
@donpollo2897
@donpollo2897 Год назад
These houses compete in a market that already meets very high standards, especially in terms of durability, energy efficiency, fire protection, earthquake resistance and sound insulation. In Europe, new buildings are generally designed for a lifespan of 40-80 years. People put a lot into the construction and expect a long and relatively low-maintenance lifespan in return. In this market, these wood-prefab buildings meet extra high requirements in terms of sustainability and low pollutant content. So they are extra high quality buildings in an already expensive environment. Such a house is virtually the antithesis of the balloon frame and would have a hard time finding its niche in the fast-paced American market.
@charlesrichardson8635
@charlesrichardson8635 Год назад
Been following you for a long time. Just to ask is there a premium cost in raw materials in terms of engineered wood vs. natural? If so is all the cost made up in waste control and automated systems? Not having to "eye ball" each 2xN would be a great advantage. The issue for foresting is the replacement multicultural forest with a monoculture. BUT overall moving some land over to sustainable wood is mostly required now.
@k4x4map46
@k4x4map46 Год назад
interesting!!
@jerryngobese3216
@jerryngobese3216 Год назад
Belinda my Fav .... wow finally you get to walk around... Don't be shy to do onsite vlogs just get a wireless and take us along, don't worry if it's too noisy you can do voice over as you are now... get out the studio and take us along...
@BelindaCarr
@BelindaCarr Год назад
Thank you, Jerry! I'm working on building my confidence so that I can record onsite vlogs. I really appreciate your support.
@jerryngobese3216
@jerryngobese3216 Год назад
@@BelindaCarr for start just do voice over go onsite, point and touch then get back in sudio and narrate it all... when you ready you can tell it as you move along
@istoppedlaughing5225
@istoppedlaughing5225 Год назад
Make a video on pre casted concrete building making
@gamingxperience7208
@gamingxperience7208 Год назад
she's amazing
@donaldhollingsworth3875
@donaldhollingsworth3875 Год назад
What is the r value of a 2X4 exterior & interior walls?
@dannmarks
@dannmarks Год назад
Could you please build a factory in Tennessee USA? This is the wave of the future.
@jpthinks
@jpthinks Год назад
you're still the best!
@erichaskell
@erichaskell Год назад
How many years does it take, on average, for lowered operating cost to reclaim the increased cost of these modular homes?
@CosmicSeeker69
@CosmicSeeker69 Год назад
Belinda - I'm a sapiophile - and I love your brain!
@raymondpeters9186
@raymondpeters9186 Год назад
Pumicecrete is by far the best building material on the planet Pumicecrete is a mixture of pumice cement and water mixed and poured into a set of reusable forms walls are poured from 12"to 24" thick pumicecrete is fireproof termite proof rust rot and mold proof non toxic and has a high R value and good sound attenuation solid poured walls means no critters can live in your walls Pumicecrete can be built for a fraction of the cost and time Pumicecrete is the only building material that can go directly from the mine to the job site ready to use without any additional possessing
@braddavenport6472
@braddavenport6472 Год назад
The initial carbon footprint might be higher, but I really envy Europeans' use of mineral wool instead of fiberglass. Overall, they emphasize insulation a lot more than we do in the US. Among other things, it means that their walls actually provide decent noise insulation.
@svenlima
@svenlima 10 месяцев назад
I'm sure you were also blown away by their prices ... :-))
@tentimesful
@tentimesful Год назад
I had I dream years ago to build houses in a factory and transfer them...
@visionlightlab6094
@visionlightlab6094 Год назад
Gone are the days of Wherehouse workers sharing bawdy humor, just whirring synchro's nowadays & homeless shelters!
@ericgraf1127
@ericgraf1127 Год назад
I would like to see you do a bit on hemp. It was so mis- aligned, During the drug wars. Partially fued with the invention of nylon rope, plastic containers, nylon fabric, etc. I think perception can only change with factual information. I'd be interested to see what present.
@backachershomestead
@backachershomestead Год назад
Pre fab has changed over 50 years.
@gacherumburu9958
@gacherumburu9958 Год назад
👍👍
@lephtovermeet
@lephtovermeet Год назад
The EU is paving the way with prefab modular construction. It makes 100x more sense than 3D printed concrete.
@ciarandonaghy131
@ciarandonaghy131 Год назад
Did you look at Entekra who do the same in California
@Dave--FkTheDeepstate
@Dave--FkTheDeepstate Год назад
Love your videos and the idea of mass produced homes ! 8:25 It's good that they're using "sustainably harvested wood", where "a tree is planted a tree for every tree cut down". That's much better than most other builders. But that 'catch phrase' doesn't seem to take into account the 20 to 200 years it took for the trees to grow to usable sizes.
@jamesbizs
@jamesbizs Год назад
In many places, we have more trees today then we did 100 years ago. Only a stupid company would not regrow trees They take. many places it’s the law too. And so what if it takes 20 to 100 years? All of you people complaining about climate change and sustainability should be happy trees take CO2 and sequester it. New trees growing means they need more than an old tree that is no longer growing.
@hugospooner9092
@hugospooner9092 Год назад
why every plastic did not have is hown weight and every color to curius how and or if it possible
@kurtnelle
@kurtnelle Год назад
I wonder how we could do this with concrete.
@TheEsseboy
@TheEsseboy Год назад
It could be adapted, but as concrete is heavier it would need stronger machines, increasing cost i little, but it is doable. They already prefabricate a lot of bridges, high rises etc. in concrete.
@valdius85
@valdius85 Год назад
The first step is the design. Without it homes will ever be cheaper. Everything custom is always expensive. In Japan most people can only afford pre-designed homes from it manufacturers. They choose the model and can only change little details - paint etc. The crew is very efficient because of their experience and all parts are easy to handle by one or max two people when needed. Obviously earthquakes and typhoon influence the design, to long spans and high sealing are for rich people. 😂
@donamills
@donamills Год назад
Estimating home repairs would be easy. You would know if your getting screwed.
@alansnyder8448
@alansnyder8448 Год назад
Belinda, Thanks for you videos. I think it is great you to talk about many different building alternatives and gives the pros and cons of each approach. I'd like to plug an idea for a future video. I'd like someday soon to build a non-tradition house and am thinking of using steel-framing as described in this video. This is FrameCad applied to a tiny house design, see the video. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nEGtSgUpUkI.html The advantage that I see is. Steel will be accurate down to the millimeter, so no warped word. For a tiny house on a trailer, it is lighter than wood. disadvantage: thermal bridging ( not sure but likely ) cost.
@disconnectpub
@disconnectpub Год назад
Soft plastic wrap is not recycleable
@ReubMann
@ReubMann Год назад
surprised no helmets needed in that environment?
@bengoacher4455
@bengoacher4455 Год назад
Unfortunately regulators aren't keeping up with innovators, and insurers are even further behind.
@coenvalk833
@coenvalk833 Год назад
I personally appreciate the decision to focus on reducing yearly CO2 usage, even if it compromises on initial CO2 emissions for construction. Especially in Europe, where homes tend to stick around for much longer than many American cities, building for yearly efficiency now will help a lot throughout the lifetime of the building.
@jotighe2
@jotighe2 Год назад
thank you for not making 'shorts' videos. please, no more 'shorts'. save them for instagram, not here.
@seetherage
@seetherage Год назад
Talk about clickbait. All the machines used are standard industrial machines. It’s as robotic as a car.
@Factory051
@Factory051 Год назад
I love advertisements.
@BobQuigley
@BobQuigley Год назад
Pick five models, build build build. Stop variation
@benterrell9139
@benterrell9139 Год назад
The art market is a massive bubble. Sure it has outperformed the S+P but that just indicates even more strongly that it is overbought territory. It is also an unregulated place where financial instruments can be structured and sold to investors without many of the safeguards associated with financial markets. Anyone investing in this market right now needs to ask themselves what do I really know about this market and what are the motivations of the people selling both the package and the underlying asset. My advice... Stay well clear. Buy things when they are over-sold, not at an all-time high.
@williamwoolcock
@williamwoolcock Год назад
We never see what the houses look like.
@tvm73836
@tvm73836 Год назад
Seems like a paid ad. For someone who is so critical about the relevance of technology in “real world” industries like construction, I’m wondering why you were gushing about these guys. 🤔
@1234barber
@1234barber 7 месяцев назад
Not so good for local contractors assemble a house didn’t make as much money as building a house that’s why most city in California don’t allow home owner add or build ready made home😅😅😅
@la4t329
@la4t329 Год назад
You wanna make everything automated, with out any people, so are the robots gonna make money so they can buy those house because if people aren't working how are they gonna afford your product ,
@Helloverlord
@Helloverlord Год назад
So, factory is based on expensive labor instead of cheap labor. 3D designer hour wage is 5X more then floor carpenter except if they outsource modeling to another third world country. Error margin is almost the same as designer probably never seen end product. They are highly dependant on automated complicated gear to work properly and in case of failure it will be costly as maintentace is high cost. Low number of workers does not contribute local community either. Highly efficient work environment does not do any good to workers on final assy, mixing robots and humans do not work for humans. Then it comes to a question of robotic hiperproduction which is disaster by itself. All of this output expensive end product. So, again, what is the good part? Is it where multimillion $ company which makes automatization process benefits? Or where end user has to take 50yrs morgage instead of 30 due to a cost, benefiting the bank?
@TheEsseboy
@TheEsseboy Год назад
No, maybe in the US, but here a 3D designer has about 1.5-2.5 times the wage of a floor carpenter, and most of the workers there are still carpenters/factory staff. No, they don't out source. No, the designer is in house walking the factory floor...so they will not have the same flaw rate as they can controll the whole process much better. The gear has been used in the industry for over 60 years, it's mature. Low number of workers is good, keeps prices down and people can always find other jobs, and in the EU if you become jobless you get support, so it's a none issue. The good part is that the design can me more precise, have less waste in material and be built much quicker. So overall, faster building speed, lower cost, better working conditions, and better quality. Win, Win, Win Win. House and property prices are much lower in the EU as the countries governments also build houses to compete and push prices down, benefiting the people.
@polka23dot70
@polka23dot70 Год назад
These machines are not robots.
@jamesbizs
@jamesbizs Год назад
I like your videos. But they did not rethink construction. Or turn making a home into a kit of parts . They used to build houses like this before. You could literally order a house from a catalog . This is not new. All they did was make it more efficient. That’s it.
@TheEsseboy
@TheEsseboy Год назад
It is new though, the whole system is vastly different. You are simplifying it a great bit j p.
@GeneralChangOfDanang
@GeneralChangOfDanang Год назад
Wow, Swiss manufactured homes make American stick built homes look rather flimsy.
@BlazingShackles
@BlazingShackles Год назад
Uh sorry, burning is not recycling.
@roberto.peterson9917
@roberto.peterson9917 Год назад
It a shame that automation is doing away with jobs have seem automation leave busy towns into ghost towns it's shame but yet understand the need to
@TheEsseboy
@TheEsseboy Год назад
It doesn't take away jobs, it just means that the people who used to do meaningless tasks gets to do more fulfilling tasks, like keeping the machines running, doing repairs, or even do another type of work completly.
@wackychicken
@wackychicken Год назад
Nothing impressive. So many other places do this. Look at the Japanese construction companies, now THAT is impressive
@jamesbizs
@jamesbizs Год назад
Yeah, I really didn’t understand where she’s coming from here. Or how this was innovative and new. Kit houses have been around since World War II. Only thing this company did was automate some of the processes and make it more efficient. There is nothing special about any of this.
@toddjerseyarchitectureinc.8059
Frame construction?? Boo!
@tuanas458
@tuanas458 Год назад
Lol I don't see the point of this company. Everything in there can be built by hand. Only skyscrapers can't be built
@Godspeed19611983
@Godspeed19611983 Год назад
dislike factory building.less fun, less learning, waste money
@TheEsseboy
@TheEsseboy Год назад
It's more efficient, less wasteful and if you wanna learn, start doing repairs, building houses should be efficient and fast, not a playground for builders.
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