Vertis 3D builds a CNC-gantry system that 3D-prints stay-in-place concrete wall forms — then fills them with structural concrete. Code-ready walls, raised in hours instead of weeks.
Florida needs single-story housing faster than crews can frame it. We replace the slowest, most labor-bound step — building and stripping forms — with a machine that prints the form and leaves it in the wall.
Traditional formwork is built, braced, poured, then torn down. Our shell prints in place and becomes part of the structure — no stripping, no waste.
The printed shell is non-structural stay-in-place formwork; the structural load is carried by the poured core — a clean, defensible path through Florida's building code.
One gantry, a small crew, repeatable runs. Skill is encoded in the machine — not lost when the most experienced framer doesn't show.
Gantry positioned over the slab, drive hardware and electronics squared, print path loaded from the wall geometry.
Self-consolidating concrete tuned for printability and strength — slump-flow verified to ASTM C1611 before a single bead is laid.
The gantry extrudes the wall shell layer by layer — precise, repeatable, no plywood, no carpentry, no waste stream.
Structural concrete poured into the printed shell. The form stays. The wall stands. Inspect, repeat, scale.
Every axis, mix, and tolerance is engineered for one job: laying structural concrete forms a home can be built from — reliably, on a real jobsite.
Printed shell classified as non-structural stay-in-place formwork.
5,000 psi for coastal C2 exposure; mock-up pour for verification.
Slump-flow tested for self-consolidating placement quality.
Designed for High-Velocity Hurricane Zone scrutiny from day one.
Receiving, assembly, formula testing, unit print, and a live demonstration pour. Come watch the machine lay a code-ready wall — start to finish.
Investors, builders, and code partners: see the gantry, the mix, and the permitting path up close.