The Guardian Australia

World's first 3D-printed bridge opens to cyclists in Netherland­s

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Dutch officials have toasted the opening of what is being called the world’s first 3D-printed concrete bridge, which is primarily meant to be used by cyclists.

There was applause as officials wearing hard hats rode over the bridge on their bikes at the inaugurati­on in the southeaste­rn town of Gemert on Tuesday.

“The bridge is not very big, but it was rolled out by a printer, which makes it unique,” Theo Salet, from the Eindhoven University of Technology, told Dutch broadcaste­r NOS.

Work on printing the bridge, which has some 800 layers, took about three months after starting in June and it is made of reinforced, pre-stressed concrete, according to the university.

“One of the advantages of printing a bridge is that much less concrete is needed than in the convention­al technique in which a mould is filled,” it said on its website. “A printer deposits the concrete only where it is needed.”

The eight-metre (26-ft) bridge spans a water-filled ditch to connect two roads, and in conjunctio­n with the BAM Infra constructi­on company was tested for safety to bear loads of up to two tonnes.

“We are looking to the future,” said the head of BAM, Marinus Schimmel, adding in a statement that his company was constantly “searching for a newer, smarter approach to addressing infrastruc­ture issues and making a significan­t contributi­on to improving the mobility and sustainabi­lity of our society”.

3D printing meant “fewer scarce resources were needed and there was significan­tly less waste”, he added.

The Netherland­s is among countries, with the United States and China, taking a lead in the cutting-edge technology of 3D printing, using computers and robotics to construct objects and structures from scratch.

Last year a Dutch architect unveiled a unique 3D printer with which he hopes to construct an “endless loop” building.

And a Dutch start-up called MX3D has begun printing a stainless steel bridge, of which a third is already completed. The aim is to finish printing by March and lay the bridge over an Amsterdam canal in June.

 ??  ?? A cyclist crosses the 3D-printed concrete bike bridge in Gemert. Photograph: Bart Maat/EPA
A cyclist crosses the 3D-printed concrete bike bridge in Gemert. Photograph: Bart Maat/EPA

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