Thursday, 15 January 2026

ROBOT HOUSE


The headline sounded promising: A robot builds a 200 m² home in 24 hours: a breakthrough that could ease the housing crisis -

https://thaihut.org/13-171599-a-robot-builds-a-200-m%C2%B2-home-in-24-hours-a-breakthrough-that-could-ease-the-housing-crisis-l/

The article only came with one image: a small home standing alone in the middle of nowhere, just like the typical tiny home; see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2025/12/pairs-25-tiny-things-house-camper.html.

Then one realised: there was really no future in this approach other than perhaps with the system. What was a far more critical matter to attend to in order to ease the housing crisis was how we manage community.



While how we build is important for efficiency in process, and the size we construct is critical in the proper and careful management of our resources, what we build and where, and with what defined relationships, are the prime matters that need consideration. We might get excited about a 200m2 house being built by a robot in 24 hours, (really: perhaps only after weeks of planning, preparation, and finishing off? – see below), but we are shown one unit without any understanding of how it might become three, let alone three hundred, other than by plonking each on the typical block by block subdivision. Already one can see the problems without delving into any detailed studies.


The one image of the 'robot house.'

We need to know more about how things come together not just as an efficient, small building, but as a community; as a group of homes that make a habitation; a village; a town; a city. We need to think about the spaces between; how buildings might touch or not touch. We need to solve matters of public space and private space without having to rely on the town planners' cunning fuzzy greenery or ‘sound-proof’ screening. We need to address these issues integrally; one hesitates to use the word ‘organically,’ but it does describe that sense of wholeness in the resolution of different pieces and parts, and functions and purposes, and their fitting, respectful juxtapositioning and interactions.



We fantasise about robots, dreaming of the day that they might take over all of our chores, while at the same time whinging and worrying about them taking over our productive jobs. Building is a task that we would like them to take over with their super efficiency and 24 hour programming; but robots do break down! They are not all ‘wine and roses.’#


More alone than ever.


Robots will not resolve community. We need to act now to address this matter rather than drool over the work of one robot making one small home in one open space in twenty-four hours. Matters are far more complex than this. It is this complexity that needs to be addressed, not in any basic or simplistic checker-board placement that we have been implementing for years, but with thought given to densities, community, and place. The danger is that we are far to quick at grabbing simple ideas as solutions to complex matters; attending to the one instead of the interaction of the many.


Complex matters need careful, integrated solutions that manage the intermingling without apology to any aspect of the interaction; the togetherness. We will all be better off with this attention to all issues, large and small; blatant and subtle. The problem is that headlines like this one just trick us into believing that something significant is happening.



The headline is the typical ‘man bites dog’ hype. The text explains:

The idea is simple on paper: if the walls can be built in a day, financing becomes lighter, rents can drop, and more people can access decent housing. Reality, of course, is messier.

Robotic construction doesn’t magically erase permits, land prices, or politics. A 200 m² house printed in 24 hours still needs a foundation, a roof, windows, insulation, plumbing, electricity, and finishing. All of that brings humans back into the story.

. . .

The 24‑hour promise usually refers to printing the structural walls of about 200 m² of floor area. Before that, crews prepare the slab, anchor rails, and calibrate the machine. After that, teams come back for the rest: roof, floors, installations. The “day” changes the most visible, slowest piece — the walls.


It is all truly misleading; hardly the great ‘breakthrough’ it is declared to be. So it is back to the drawing board, but this time we need to think of enduring community rather than the snappy, eye-catching press release that only allows ourselves to be fooled. No robot ever built a home in twenty-four hours; there is no breakthrough! That will come when we attend to community.


One example of more than one; of a group placed nowhere.

NOTE:

All images have been described as being 'a 200sqm home built by a robot in 24 hours,' but relate to different projects. The headline must be a popular mantra.


 #

They are not long, the weeping and the laughter,
   Love and desire and hate:
I think they have no portion in us after
   We pass the gate.

They are not long, the days of wine and roses:
    Out of a misty dream
Our path emerges for a while, then closes
   Within a dream.

 Ernest Dowson (1867-1900)


Ernest Dowson - a real person.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.