This3D printingThe sculpture is called the “House of Dust” and was built by WASP in collaboration with the Wiesbaden Museum and artist Alison Knowles. Alison Knowles is a pioneer of the Fluxus movement. The Fluxus movement is an avant-garde art movement that emerged in the late 1950s. Synonymous with the gradual transition between life.
Knowles turned to WASP to create an environmentally friendly, habitable “House of Dust”, inspired by her computer poem of the same name written in 1967, which is the latest work in a series of subsequent structures, and In line with the “green cycle concept”.
Massimo Moretti, the founder of WASP, said: “It is the responsibility of the most advanced society to formulate procedures to treat housing as an inherent right of everyone. In terms of ordinary materials, agriculture,
food
The waste in the chain and the original soil deposited by the machine can be changed to a certain extent and in quantity
House
The shapeless substance inside is the process that WASP is developing. Such a sculptural house is the culmination of this process.”
3D printingThe concept behind the sculpture lies in Knowles’ computer poetry, she uses
Siemens
The 4004 computer created this poem in Fortran, which is said to be the first example of a computer-generated poem. This poem is composed of verses, which are formed by iterating over the words in a limited word list.
According to Knowles, this computerized form of poetry highlights the “potential arbitrariness” of language and shows how words acquire different meanings through changes in structural relationships and context.This poem was transformed into a physical structure in Chelsea, New York in 1968. Now Knowles has chosen WASP to bring her poem to life again, this time through3D printingmedium.

“House of Dust” uses Crane WASP of WASP 3D printingMachine in just 50 hours3D printingfrom. The sculpture is composed of 165 layers of 15 mm material, using 15 kilometers of extruded material, of which 8 meters are natural materials. The total area of the sculpture is 16 square meters, and the total height reaches 2.5 meters.
The “House of Dust” built with sustainable materials aims to represent the “integration of technological progress in the dialogue between man and technology” and between man and a new way of life. This work of art is one of 10 temporary livable sculptures placed in Frankfurt/Metropolitan Area on the Rhine by international artists until September 26. During this period, people can see the sculpture in Frankfurt, Darmstadt and Wiesbaden, and visitors can even book an overnight stay in the sculpture.

WASP’s recyclable concept3D printinghistory
3D printingThe machine has successfully built a small eco-house for its Shamballa project, an eco-friendly technology village built in Italy using resource-based additive manufacturing. The building called Gaia was printed using raw soil from the surrounding area and natural waste materials such as vegetable fibers. Last October, WASP collaborated with Rossana Orlandi Gallery in Milan to showcase the project at the gallery’s “We Are Nature” event.

Taking advantage of the success of the Gaia project, WASP began to plan another eco-friendly type entirely printed on local land
housing
The model, named TECLA, was officially completed and installed earlier this year. TECLA’s design is completely carbon neutral, can adapt to any climate, and is printed entirely with recyclable materials. The building was developed in response to the growing global climate emergency and the need for sustainable housing in response to natural disasters.
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