haus.me develops fully autonomous mobile houses that are self-sustainable. Its prefabricated houses, which use 3D printing technology for manufacturing, are fully assembled in a factory and moved to the location without any on-site work or construction permit requirements. The company, based in Reno, Nevada, has set up its manufacturing facility in Seattle, Washington. Once assembled, delivery across the US takes around two to three weeks. The company also reports that haus.me can be shipped to any international seaport depending on the receiving country’s regulations.
haus.me houses are built with roof-integrated solar panels that generate adequate energy to power the entire house for several days; excess power is stored in a backup battery for future use. During adverse weather, such as storms, the house will switch itself to a low energy consumption mode. Unlike most of the other prefabs, its houses are not required to be connected to the electricity grid, as they are developed to be energy self-sufficient. However, they can be connected to an electrical grid if needed. The houses are also equipped with a cloud-based monitoring and diagnostic system that monitors and detects maintenance issues before they occur.
The company reports that its houses are 20x more energy efficient than traditional homes. The company offers two house models: a one-bedroom (400 sq ft) house priced at USD 199,000 upwards and a two-bedroom house (800 sq ft) priced at USD 379,000 upwards, excluding permits and taxes. The company had reportedly received more than 10,000 buyer requests even before the product was launched in 2019. This reached 19,000 by August 2020 with 40 pre-orders. Its first orders were scheduled to be delivered during the spring-summer of 2020 but were postponed to 2021 due to the Covid-19 crisis.
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