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Design London 2022 attendees interact with the Island Steps installation.
Design London 2022 attendees interact with the Island Steps installation.

Press release -

A playful 3D printed oasis showcases the potential of graphene-enriched cement free mortar

Materials science meets design and sustainability at Design London 2022: Versarien and designer Steuart Padwick display a low-carbon artwork.

Graphene Flagship Partner Versarien together with award-winning designer and artist Steuart Padwick has created a 3D printed installation made of 100% cement free mortar enhanced by graphene. This innovative material is strong, reduces the carbon footprint by as much as 35% when compared with concrete, and cures quickly.

High quantities of CO2 are emitted when limestone and other ingredients are heated to about 1,480 degrees Celsius in the production of cement – the binding element of both traditional concrete and mortar. No cement was used to build Island Steps, as it was 3D printed using mortar enriched with Versarien’s graphene-enhanced admixture, CementeneTM, which boosts the strength and durability of mortar. The result is a sturdy structure, which is also thin and light.

“I designed Island Steps, using Versarien’s advanced Graphene enriched 3D printed cement free concrete, to demonstrate the versatility, beauty and more importantly its extraordinary low carbon credentials. The possibilities for the design and construction industry are very exciting and an important part of our transition towards carbon neutral,” says Padwick, who is best known for Head Above Water on London’s South Bank, and COP26’s artwork, The Hope Sculpture Project, in Glasgow (UK).

Displayed at Design London 2022, Island Steps has been designed as a playful oasis where people can sit on round-shaped components. The entire structure was 3D printed in record time: it took around 40 minutes to print the biggest piece, while it would have required weeks or even months for a pre-cast equivalent, considering the time required for the mould to be made.

“Casting a product like this one in concrete would need a lot of different bespoke moulds, which can be expensive and time consuming to produce. This method removes the carbon footprint, cost and time associated with the making and disposing of the formwork itself, as well as saving a huge amount of material in comparison to a solid-cast equivalent,” highlights Ben Harries, Versarien’s architect and designer. “Architects are often reminded that ‘curves equal cost’. However, in the case of 3D printing, creating straight or curved shapes is equivalent.”

The same material and technology can be applied to other structures, such as the façade of buildings and other indoor or outdoor elements for landscape architecture. "This low carbon, cement-free mortar clearly demonstrates a transformation in the way we can think, design and construct our buildings and interior spaces in future,” adds Neill Ricketts, CEO of Graphene Flagship partner Versarien.

Kari Hjelt, Head of Innovation of the Graphene Flagship, comments: "Since the total buildings sector floor area is projected to double in the next 40 years, the construction industry will benefit from low-carbon solutions strengthened with graphene".

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About the Graphene Flagship

The Graphene Flagship celebrates a decade of 2D materials innovation

Funded by the European Commission in 2013, the Graphene Flagship has brought graphene innovation out of the lab and into commercial applications. Bringing diverse competencies from nearly 170 academic and industrial partners in 22 countries together, the Graphene Flagship facilitates cooperation between its partners, accelerating the timeline for industry acceptance of graphene technologies. With applications in everything from energy and transportation to electronics and biomedicine, graphene and other 2D materials are changing the way we live and work. The European Commission’s FET Flagships enable research projects on an unprecedented scale. With €1 billion budgets, the Graphene Flagship, Human Brain Project and Quantum Flagship serve as technology accelerators, helping Europe to compete with other global markets in research and innovation. With an additional €20 million investment, the European Commission has now funded the creation of an experimental pilot line for graphene-based electronics, optoelectronics and sensors.

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Graphene Flagship sails into Horizon Europe

Bringing together 118 academic and industrial partners in 12 research and innovation projects and 1 coordination and support project, the Graphene Flagship initiative will continue to advance Europe’s strategic autonomy in technologies that rely on graphene and other 2D materials. The initiative, which builds on the previous 10-years of the Graphene Flagship, is funded by the European Commission’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme. The 2D-Experimental Pilot Line, addressing the challenges of upscaling 2D material production processes for the semiconductor industry, is another key component of the Graphene Flagship ecosystem.

Graphene Flagship