JT+Partners and IACAD
Dubai will soon be home to the world's first 3D-printed mosque. The emirate's Islamic Affairs and Charitable Activities Department (IACAD) has commissioned the building for Bur Dubai, shown in this rendering. Work is set to begin at the end of this year.
JT+Partners and IACAD
The 2,000-square-meter (21,500 square feet) mosque, pictured in a rendering, will have capacity for 600 worshippers and is scheduled to open its doors in 2025.
ICON
In 3D-printed construction, a cement mix is extruded from a nozzle to form layers that create vertical walls.
ICON
3D-printed buildings are constructed using huge printers that are taken to a site and programmed to print the desired pattern.
ICON
New 3D-printed buildings are popping up across the world. ICON, a Texas-based 3D-construction company, has masterminded several 3D-printed home projects, such as House Zero, pictured here.
Regan Morton
ICON is also responsible for projects where entire neighborhoods have been printed, such as the Community First project, built to house homeless people in Texas.
ICON
Also in Texas, ICON teamed up with the Texas Military Department to build the first ever 3D-printed army barracks.
Bart van Overbeeke Fotografie/Bart van Overbeeke Fotografie/foto: Bart van Overbeeke
In the Netherlands, Eindhoven University of Technology has proposed a series of five homes for its innovative research initiative, Project Milestone.
CNN  — 

In recent years, 3D-printing has been used to build everything from homes to businesses and even bridges. Now, Dubai is set to construct the world’s first 3D-printed mosque.

The structure will accommodate 600 worshippers and cover 2,000 square meters over two floors, according to Ali Mohammad Alhalyan Alsuwaidi, head of engineering at the Dubai Government’s Islamic Affairs and Charitable Activities Department (IACAD). It will be made from a concrete mix, with construction planned to begin by the end of year and expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2025.

“We elected to 3D-print the mosque because it’s a new and innovative technology that can potentially save time and resources compared to traditional building methods,” Alhalyan Alsuwaidi said. IACAD declined to name the company that will be responsible for the construction.

Constructing buildings using 3D-printing requires large printing machines that are programmed with the design information. They squeeze out the construction material from a nozzle, building up the structure in layers. The vast majority of 3D-printed structures are made from concrete, but it is possible to print using other materials, such as clay.

JT+Partners and IACAD
A rendering of the 3D-printed mosque, which will be built in Bur Dubai.

Modernizing the construction industry

Dubai has set out to become the 3D-printing capital of the world, and in 2018 it launched a “3D Printing Strategy” that planned for 25% of the emirate’s new construction to be 3D-printed by 2030.

By 2019 it held the world record for the largest 3D-printed structure – the Dubai Municipality building (standing 9.5 meters tall with an area of 640 square meters) – as well as being home to the world’s first 3D-printed office, and a 3D-printed drone research laboratory.

But new 3D-printed buildings are popping up across the world – from housing for refugees in Jordan and for homeless people in Austin, Texas, to whole complexes of buildings, such as the 3,800 square foot (353 square meter) Camp Swift military training center, and entire neighborhoods, like the New Story project in Tabasco, Mexico, which will provide homes for families living in poverty.

Theo Salet is dean of the Department of the Built Environment at Eindhoven University of Technology, in the Netherlands. He is an advocate for modernizing the construction industry through technology such as 3D-printing.

“A vast amount of construction work needs to be done in the coming decades, in the context of a lack of skilled construction workers, an energy transition and a need for the industry to become more sustainable,” he said.

“Digital design and construction will save time … reduce construction costs and costs of failures, solve the problem of a lack of construction workers and allow us to rethink our designs in terms of sustainability,” he added.

He believes that a project like Dubai’s proposed mosque is the next phase in 3D-printed architectural design, but anticipates it will face challenges.

“Realizing a large and eye-catching project like this is quite a task, of a scale yet unknown,” he said. “Without any doubt the 3D printing will work – however, rendered drawings make promises that must be (possible) to meet in practice … A project of this scale and ambition is, in my opinion, a project to learn from and mistakes should be possible.”