Home Architecture News El Cosmico: World’s First 3D-Printed Hotel
Architecture News

El Cosmico: World’s First 3D-Printed Hotel

Share
Share

The world’s first 3D-printed hotel is being built in the Texas desert. Known as El Cosmico, the project is a collaboration between hotelier Liz Lambert, construction-tech company ICON, and the architects of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG). The new site in Marfa, Texas, will cover 60 acres near Big Bend National Park, featuring guest rooms, privately owned “Sunday Homes,” and shared community areas shaped by ICON’s 3D-printing technology.

Lambert calls this moment “the realization of a longtime dream,” rooted in childhood summers spent at her family’s ranch and an intent to deepen El Cosmico’s impact in Marfa economically, culturally, and communally.

El Cosmico’s Organic Architecture: BIG and ICON Use 3D Printing for Geometric Forms

The architecture blends traditional forms with forward-looking design, led by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG). Their forms, domes, arches, vaults, and parabolas are enabled by 3D printing. These curvatures, says Ingels, “enjoy the freedom of form in the empty desert,” emerging seamlessly from the land when printed with local sand, soil, and subtle pigments that mirror the terrain.

As 3D printing becomes increasingly central to architectural innovation, platforms like PAACADEMY offer specialized courses that equip professionals with the practical skills needed to harness this evolving medium.

Dominating the build site is ICON’s Vulcan, a gantry-style 3D printer roughly 46.5 feet wide, 15.5 feet tall, weighing over 4 tons. It extrudes ICON’s proprietary Lavacrete cement-like, low-carbon, strong, pigment-adjusted, and tuned in real-time to humidity and heat to frame curving 12-foot-high walls for both the first guest unit and a three-bedroom prototype home.

Jason Ballard, ICON’s CEO, explains that this material composition must adapt on the fly to weather and light, ensuring both structural integrity and the right tonal harmony with the desert.

Living Spaces at El Cosmico: 3D-Printed Guest Rooms, Homes, and Shared Amenities

El Cosmico’s expansion builds on the original ethos while offering layered experiences for guests and owners alike. At its core, the project introduces 43 new hotel units, each designed for nightly stays ranging from $200 to $445. These units will embrace bold, organic forms, domes, vaults, and sweeping curves made possible by ICON’s 3D-printing technology, bringing an arts-driven vision to practical hospitality 

Alongside the hotel rooms, “Sunday Homes” offer a deeper level of immersion. These are three- and four-bedroom residences, measuring between 2,000 and 2,500 square feet on spacious, one-plus-acre lots with breathtaking views of the Davis Mountains.

Prices start at approximately $2.29 million, with some listings noting up to $2.3 million for four-bedroom versions. Designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), the homes’ cylindrical geometry and curving facades reflect the desert landscape and the design freedom enabled by 3D printing. 

Beyond private stays, the development offers communal spaces that elevate the sense of place. A sculptural, circular infinity pool invites shared relaxation, while a bathhouse and a restaurant helmed by a James Beard–nominated chef provide artistry, gathering, and refreshment in fluid, desert-intimate settings.

Construction is scheduled to continue through 2026, when the new El Cosmico is expected to open to guests. Lambert and Ingels see the design as a reflection of Marfa’s character, part art scene, part laid-back camping culture, and part tight-knit community. As Ingels describes it, the buildings are meant to feel natural, straightforward, and in tune with the desert.

Images courtesy ICON

Share

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.