Zuri Gardens: Houston’s First 3D-Printed Home Community Is Taking Shape

by Katie Day

Houston has never been shy about big ideas—but the next housing innovation might be printed by a robot. Zuri Gardens, an 80-home neighborhood coming to Southeast Houston, will use large-format 3D printers to create sturdy, energy-efficient micro-homes priced in the low-to-mid $200Ks.

Where It’s Going Up
Zuri Gardens is planned for the south Houston area near Madden Lane and Carson Road in the 77048 zip code. Backed by a City of Houston initiative to boost attainable housing, the project targets buyers earning up to 120 percent of the area median income.

What Makes a 3D-Printed Home Different?
Instead of traditional wood framing, gantry-style printers layer a cement-based mix—think giant icing nozzles, but with concrete—to “print” exterior and interior walls directly on site. The technique offers:

  • Speed: Printing can slash construction time by up to 95 percent versus conventional builds.
  • Strength: The composite walls are designed to withstand hurricane-force winds and heavy rain—crucial for Gulf Coast living.
  • Sustainability: The low-carbon cement mix lowers CO₂ emissions and cuts construction waste.

The Homes
Size: Roughly 1,000 – 1,300 sq ft—perfect for first-time buyers, downsizers, or anyone craving a low-maintenance footprint.

Layout: Single-story cottages with open-concept living, two to three bedrooms, and optional solar-ready roofs. Renderings hint at Scandinavian-inspired facades and deep front porches.

Price Point: Starting in the low $200Ks—well below the average cost of new construction inside Beltway 8.

Why It Matters for Houston

  • Affordability Gap: With median new-home prices hovering near $360K, Zuri Gardens broadens options for buyers who feel priced out of brand-new inventory.
  • Storm Resilience: Concrete-printed walls resist mold, pests, and 120 mph winds—promising lower repair bills after our inevitable tropical storms.
  • Faster Delivery: Rapid build cycles mean more homes hitting the market sooner, easing supply pressure in a city that adds more than 250 new residents every day.

What’s Next
Site work has begun, and the first printer is scheduled to roll out later this year. Model-home tours should open once the initial slabs cure and interiors are finished. If everything stays on track, early residents could move in as soon as late 2026.

Would you trade two-by-fours for printed concrete? We’d love to hear your thoughts—could you see yourself living in a 3D-printed home?

Join the conversation on @houston.unlocked.



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