Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Tuesday, March 17 2020 - 02:31
AsiaNet
Materialise's 3D Printed Hands-Free Door Opener Eliminates Direct Contact With Door Handle
LEUVEN, Belgium, March 16, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

    -- 3D Printing Technology Supports Coronavirus Containment Efforts

3D printing technology may lend a hand in preventing the spread of the 
Coronavirus. Materialise, a Belgium-based pioneer in 3D printing, has designed 
a 3D printed door opener that makes it possible to open and close doors with 
your arm, removing the need for direct contact with door handles. The company 
is offering the printable design for free and calling upon the global 3D 
printing community to 3D print the door opener and make it available all around 
the world. 

Experts believe that the Coronavirus can survive on surfaces for an extended 
time, and door handles represent a high risk of contamination. The 3D printed 
door opener can be attached to existing door handles and features a 
paddle-shaped extension that allows people to open and close doors with their 
arm instead of their hands. For safety reasons, not all doors can remain open 
and by removing the need to touch door handles, the 3D printed door opener can 
help to reduce the spread of the virus. 

The hands-free door opener can be fitted to a door handle without drilling 
holes or replacing the existing door handle. The first model can be attached to 
cylindrical handles and Materialise plans to introduce additional designs using 
different 3D printing technologies as needed in response to the spread of the 
Coronavirus. 

The idea for the 3D printed door handle originated at an internal meeting to 
define measures to protect Materialise employees and visitors. It soon became 
clear that more people could benefit from this design and the company decided 
to make it available for free. Anyone with access to a 3D printer can download 
the design and 3D print it locally in a matter of hours. Through this 
technology, the 3D printed door opener could become available all over the 
world very quickly. In 2018 more than half a million 3D printers were sold 
globally. The file can be downloaded at 
https://www.materialise.com/en/hands-free-door-opener 

3D printing is a digital manufacturing technology that makes it possible to 
create products quickly and in small batches. 3D printing also makes it 
possible to manufacture locally. As travel and transport become more difficult, 
the ability to manufacture locally becomes more important.

"The power of 3D printing in combination with Materialise's three decades of 3D 
printing expertise made it possible to turn an idea into an innovative product 
in less than 24 hours," says Fried Vancraen CEO of Materialise. "By making the 
design available digitally, it can be produced on 3D printers everywhere and 
become available around the world in a matter of hours. In this case, we 
designed the product in Belgium and people in China, Europe or the U.S. can now 
3D print the door opener locally."

People who don't have access to a 3D printer or a local 3D print factory can 
also order the door opener via the i.materialise portal. A set of two 
hands-free door openers, including screws, is available for 40 euro. 
Materialise has three decades of experience in 3D printing and runs one of the 
largest 3D print factories in the world. 

Photos and video of the door opener and 3D printing process are available at 
mtls.me/door-opener

About Materialise
Materialise incorporates three decades of 3D printing experience into a range 
of software solutions and 3D printing services, which together form the 
backbone of the 3D printing industry. Materialise's open and flexible solutions 
enable players in a wide variety of industries, including healthcare, 
automotive, aerospace, art and design, and consumer goods, to build innovative 
3D printing applications that aim to make the world a better and healthier 
place. Headquartered in Belgium, with branches worldwide, Materialise combines 
the largest group of software developers in the industry with one of the 
largest 3D printing facilities in the world. For additional information, please 
visit: www.materialise.com.

Twitter: @MaterialiseNV [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2752749-1&h=1730919853&u=https%3A%2F%2Ftwitter.com%2Fmaterialisenv&a=%40MaterialiseNV 
] 
Visit: www.materialise.com  

SOURCE  Materialise

CONTACT: Kristof Sehmke, Email: Kristof.sehmke@materialise.be, Or 
press@materialise.com
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