Architects and contractors have traditionally worked from 2D plans. While seemingly precise, 2D plans, in fact, lend themselves to interpretation and thus misinterpretation. "The human mind thinks in three dimensions, not two," explains Partha. "The architectural community communicates in two dimensions only because there hasn't been a viable technology for readily communicating in three dimensions until now. 3D printing is a breakthrough that I believe will redefine technical communication for the next 200 years. Every design should be represented in 3D, and soon will be. It is my sincere desire that all architects move to 3D soon. Every customer of iKix has come back repeatedly for subsequent projects. They have found the benefits irresistible."
Consider a typical large residential community. It takes perhaps three months to design and 15 months to build. Two months into construction, with all trades working from 2D blueprints, the architect sees something amiss due to a misinterpretation of the plans. A misplaced wall. Or a staircase headed for a support column. The choices are 1) tearing everything down after 20 percent of the project is built, incurring a major loss of time, labor, and material; or 2) accepting the mistake and continuing construction. Neither option works. Handcrafted models don't solve the problem. They are approximations of the plan while a 3D printed model essentially is the plan.
"What is intended in plans is often starkly different from what is executed," observes Partha. "That's why iKix clients are commissioning 3D printed physical models from the earliest stages of the design and avoiding these catastrophes. Clients bring us in early and start making models from the concept stage, which is yielding project management savings in the 3 to 8 percent range, which is huge given the size of their construction budgets."
"The value of the iKix models are really in the time and money saved due to cost and time overruns avoided," says Chander Seetaraman, CEO of CS Designs, a top design firm in India and an early iKix user. "They pay for themselves right at the early stages of the project.
Partha offers the example of a recent urban residential project with hundreds of clustered units. The client was happy with the plans, but when he saw the 3D printed model, he immediately worried the units were too crowded together. The architect moved a pool and fitness club into the center of the site to ease the congestion. This is a solution that all parties would have otherwise missed until the buildings were halfway up.
Civil engineering projects need physical models, too, according to Partha. When officials are planning to build a highway overpass, for example, they must plan temporary traffic flows over the various phases of the job. Having 3D physical models for every stage eliminates confusion and improves construction efficiency.