XtreeE - featured BIM software image

XtreeE

XtreeE is a construction 3D printing supplier that sells modular robotic concrete printers, material pumping and printhead hardware, and a companion software stack for slicing, simulation, machine control, and production analytics.

XtreeE targets professional concrete printing with a modular hardware line built around robotic arms, printheads labeled in 1K, 2K, and 3K+ tiers, and supporting pumps and admixture systems. Public specification sheets list concrete flow rates up to about 7.0 L/min for the printhead and granular limits around 3 mm, giving buyers concrete numbers to compare against other extrusion systems (XtreeE, 2026).

On the software side, XtreeE advertises Slice for toolpath generation, Simulate for early-age structural checks tied to printing parameters, Control for operator-facing machine control, and Supervise for web-based monitoring and reporting. Some modules are described as subscription-only, while a free tier is offered for basic printer operation needs according to the vendor?s software pages.

The company also promotes compatibility with multiple industrial robot brands and optional tracks and extensions, which matters for firms that already own automation assets and want to add a cement extrusion stack. A public map-style summary on the homepage lists example customer deployments across several countries, including multiple references in France and the United States (XtreeE, 2026).

Procurement remains specialized: hardware pricing runs through quotes, and certain digital features require subscriptions or partner verification, such as the online configurator noted as restricted to verified partners.

Specifications

Pricing

Freemium

Platforms

WebWindows

Used for

Large-format concrete printingPrinted facade elementsR&D printing programsFactory-style additive construction

Used by

Precast producersResearch labsConcrete contractorsEquipment integrators

Tasks

Toolpath programmingPrint simulationRobotic concrete placementProduction monitoring

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Clear separation of hardware tiers and software modules helps teams phase investment.
  • Published technical numbers on flow rates and electrical demand support electrical and plant planning.
  • Software story covers the full loop from geometry to monitoring, not only g-code output.

Cons

  • Concrete printing still depends on mix design, curing, and local structural approval paths.
  • Some software capabilities require paid subscriptions or partner status.
  • Buyer must integrate robots, safety fencing, and site logistics outside the slicer.

Key features

  • Modular printer tiers: 1K, 2K, and 3K+ configurations described as scaling print speed and material-handling capability with add-on components.

  • Robot flexibility: Marketing lists compatibility with several industrial arm families and options like linear tracks and extensions.

  • XtreeE Slice: Geometry-to-toolpath workflow with free and paid capability sets, including non-planar slicing and texturing in premium messaging.

  • XtreeE Simulate: Simulation positioned for printability review using early-age structural modeling themes; subscription-gated per vendor copy.

  • XtreeE Control and Supervise: Operator HMI plus remote monitoring, KPI views, and downloadable reports framed for quality traceability.

Pricing

Software (free tier)

per month

Free

Vendor lists a free tier with basic Slice and Control capabilities; verify feature limits on xtreee.com.

Software (subscription)

per month

Free

Paid tier quoted by XtreeE; pricing not listed as a single public number on the main software page.

Printer hardware

Contact sales

Robotic printer systems sold via quotation; includes integration and regional factors.

Frequently asked questions

What does XtreeE sell?

XtreeE sells large-scale concrete 3D printing equipment, including printheads, pumping and admixture hardware, and integration options with industrial robots, plus software for slicing, simulation, machine operation, and analytics. Exact bundles are quoted for each customer.

Is XtreeE software free?

XtreeE advertises a free software tier with a limited feature set for running a printer, and a paid subscription tier that unlocks advanced slicing, simulation, supervision, and library access. Confirm current entitlements on XtreeE?s software page before you standardize workflows.

Which robots work with XtreeE?

Marketing pages reference multiple brands and sizes, including ABB models in example specifications, plus options for tracks and extensions. Your integrator should validate reach, payload, and safety requirements for your print envelope and local regulations.

Does XtreeE print structural walls for any code?

The printers extrude concrete, but structural acceptance depends on engineering design, material testing, and the authority having jurisdiction. Use XtreeE?s simulation tools as one input alongside licensed structural engineering and code submittals.

How fast can XtreeE concrete printers build?

Vendor materials compare 1K, 2K, and 3K+ tiers with relative building-rate labels rather than a single universal m? per hour figure for all mixes. Real throughput depends on layer heights, mix rheology, pump limits, and print strategy.

Where is XtreeE used?

The public site highlights customer examples across multiple regions. Treat that map as illustrative marketing, not a guarantee of local service coverage; ask the vendor about training, spare parts, and support in your country.

Tutorials and learning

Sources