Julian Ochs

Julian Ochs
University of Kassel · Faculty of Architecture, Urban Planning and Landscape Architecture (ASL)

Master of Science

About

6
Publications
2,370
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25
Citations
Introduction
Hi, I‘m Julian. I am an architect and researcher at the University of Kassel . Our current research is about robotic 3D-Printing with continuous wooden fibre - a completely new approach of 3D-Printing with a renewable material.

Publications

Publications (6)
Article
Full-text available
Additive manufacturing is a promising and resource-efficient construction method, applying material only where needed. Demand for these processes in construction is growing, but research into their use in timber construction is limited. The 3DWoodWind project explores additive application methods using thin wood veneer strips. Robotic winding proce...
Chapter
Full-text available
Emerging from research in computational design and digital fabrication, the use of robot arms in architecture is now making its way in the practice of construction. However, their increasing diffusion has not yet corresponded to the development of shared approaches covering both digital (programming and simulation) and physical (end-effector design...
Chapter
Winding processes are known from the fiber composite industry for strength and weight optimized lightweight components. To achieve high resistance and low weight, mainly synthetic materials are used such as carbon or glass fibers, bonded with petrochemical matrices. For the construction industry, these additive processes present a very promising an...
Article
Full-text available
Additive manufacturing (AM), as resource-efficient fabrication processes, could also be used in the dimensions of the construction industry, as a variety of experimental projects using concrete and steel demonstrate. In timber construction, currently few additive technologies have been developed having the potential to be used in large scale. Curre...
Conference Paper
ABSTRACT. Current commercial additive manufacturing (AM) methods with wood filaments are based on extrusion of thermoplastics that are mixed with ground timber (approx. 40% content). Therefore, these filaments do not have the inherent structural and mechanical properties of timber with its continuous fibers. The mechanical strength of the thermopl...

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