Icon, the construction technologies company, announced it has completed a series of 3D-printed homes as part of its continued partnership with Mobile Loaves & Fishes (MLF), the Austin non-profit widely known for its compassionate service to the area’s homeless community.
The 400 square foot homes, 3D-printed with Icon’s Vulcan II printer, feature one bedroom, one bath, a full kitchen, living room and a large porch with sweeping sunset views. The series of 3D-printed homes will soon be a place for the formerly homeless to call home at Community First! Village, one of the most innovative communities in the world.
“Icon at its heart is innovation for a better future,” said Jason Ballard, co-founder and CEO of Icon. We’re going to have to take some risks if we want a better world for ourselves, and the team at Mobile Loaves & Fishes shares a similar vision in their efforts to empower the community around them into a lifestyle of service with the homeless. We need a radical rethinking in the way that we approach solving vexing issues in our society like homelessness. At the end of the day, this is all about people and the dignity of human beings.”
“The promise of Icon’s 3D-printing technology is really exciting, and what better place to start putting it to use than in one of the country’s most innovative neighborhoods designed to serve men and women who have experienced the trauma of homelessness,” said Alan Graham, founder and CEO of Mobile Loaves & Fishes. “Vulnerable populations like the homeless are never among the first to access leading-edge anything, but now here in Austin, Texas they’re among the first in line who will be living in some of the most unique homes ever built—and we think that’s a beautiful thing.”
The series of 3D-printed homes by Icon are located in Phase II of the northeast Austin development, bringing the entire property to 51 total acres. When Phase II is completed and at full capacity, Community First! will have an estimated 480 formerly homeless individuals living in the Village—which represents about 40 percent of Austin’s chronically homeless population.