This 3D Printed Prefab Home Can Be Moved Anywhere
This next dwelling breathes new life into the phrase “pick up and move.” The Haus.me is a 3D-printed prefab home that can be moved anywhere.
It’s off-the-grid, capable of fully running off solar polar and only requires a flat ground surface for construction. The home comes with solar energy battery storage, water tanks and autonomous sewage. There’s no need for a foundation, which makes for a quick and simply placement or relocation process.
The home’s self-sustaining nature means that there’s no need for an electric connection, propane tanks or wood. In addition to the autonomous sewage and solar power generation, the Haus.me generates water from air condensation, making it the ultimate off-the-grid mobile home. The home’s environmentally conscious construction is based in part on a patented composite polymer insulation that can be 3-D printed into material used to build walls. According to the creators, this feature, along with the paneled windows that form part of the structure, can save the owner up to $3,600 in annual energy costs.
Inside, the home is suited for maximum comfort. It comes with built-in furniture and a fully-equipped kitchen plus a host of tech accessories, including a Nest camera, an Apple TV, round-the-clock internet connection, Sonos speaker system, thermostat and a fingerprint-activated door lock. As if Haus.me doesn’t already sound sufficiently move-in ready, it also comes with wine glasses.
Touted as a “one-of-a-kind, integrated, intelligent” dwelling, Haus.me is equipped with 24 subsystems that guarantee not only the occupants’ comfort but safety as well.
Haus.me currently comes in three models: The mOne is a single-story home that offers 400 square feet of living space and starts at $199,999; the mTwo is an 800-square-foot option with two bedrooms with a starting price of $379,999; the MFour is a two-story, three-bedroom, two-bathroom model measuring 1,600 square feet with a starting price of $1 million.