Design by fire: Could a Kansas City company 3-D print the Notre Dame spire?
May 7, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Beyond its status as the biggest in Kansas City, the impact of Dimensional Innovations’ new $2.2 million 3-D printer could reach globally — as the homegrown company considers ways it could help rebuild the historic spire atop the Notre Dame Cathedral, said Nate Borozinski.
“This thing gives us an ability — and we think an advantage — in the entire situation because it’s so versatile,” said Borozinski, Innovation Lab manager at the Overland Park firm who works closely with its large scale additive manufacturing machine known as L-SAM.
The device could closely replicate what was lost in the April fire that tore through the 856-year-old Parisian cathedral, he said.
“We’re not going so far as to say we’re going to redesign [the spire] at this point. We’re saying we can rebuild it in a way that was not there a few weeks ago and we can do it a lot faster than any other method … and it’s a way that less susceptible to fire,” said Borozinski, explaining Dimensional Innovations’ pitch for rebuilding the 300-foot spire through a competition sponsored by the French government.
Click here to learn more about the French call for designs in light of the destruction of Notre Dame.

Large scale additive manufacturing machine ( L-SAM), Dimensional Innovations
“[A co-worker said,] ‘Hey, there’s a competition’ …. And it’s like ‘Yeah, we could do that now. Let’s do it,” Borozinski said of team collaboration and the initial idea behind dreaming up what could become a piece of history.
Purchased with the intent to advance Dimensional Innovations’ ongoing work in the design space — which already has included such projects as a life-sized Acrocanthosaurus at the Arizona Museum of Natural History, a complete overhaul of Target Center in Minnesota, and a 12-foot high, 500-pound electric guitar that welcomes guests to Kansas City’s Boulevardia — the L-SAM could also serve as a means to elevate the metro’s innovation space and open a door to new collaborations in 3-D printing, added Tom Collins, COO of Dimensional Innovations.
“Someone’s coming up with something new all the time. With both the spire and our other projects we’re looking at right now, what we’re thinking about in those worlds is [producing] more architectural elements,” Collins explained.
An under-wraps, large-scale element already is being constructed using the L-SAM, he acknowledged, noting only the project’s design and significance will bend people’s minds in new ways.
It’s about bridging digital and physical, Collins said, noting architecture represents not only a new market for the company, but an opportunity for rapid adoption of 3-D printing in commercial construction.
“We’re excited about partnerships with architecture firms, engineering firms, general contractors, — which are people that we work with but don’t necessarily partner with all the time. We’re excited about getting that community together in Kansas City,” Collins envisioned.
Using the L-SAM machine — which can produce items as massive as 10 feet wide, 20 feet long and 5 feet high — to produce construction materials could serve as a way of showing the world just how powerful 3-D printing can be, helping them better understand its potential, Collins said.
“I think the spire is a good example … because people traditionally don’t think about things like that being printed, right? When you can take that theory and make it something that is a real physical daily [object] then you can [better understand the importance of 3-D printing and how it works,” he said.
Click here to read about Doob 3-D’s challenges in the Kansas City 3-D printing space.
Working to create more examples of the power behind 3-D printing could prove to be just what the technology needs for widespread adoption, Collins said.
The opportunity to do so on a global scale with the rebuild of Notre Dame could convert even more curious citizens into customers, he noted.
Featured Business
2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘Stablecoin summer’: Crypto community greets GENIUS Act with optimism, caution
Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Missouri Business Alert, a member of the Kansas City Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, Kansas City PBS/Flatland, and The Kansas City Beacon. Click here to read the original story. [divide] A new federal cryptocurrency law has sparked a range of reactions across…
How KC transformed entrepreneurship from counterculture into a model for the mainstream
Veteran ecosystem builders returned to the Heartland this week, urging a new generation of entrepreneur advocates to embrace Kansas City’s style of experimentation and its uniquely collaborative startup culture. “Entrepreneurship is not spreadsheets and business plans,” said Jonathan Ortmans, who founded the Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN) — the nonprofit parent of Global Entrepreneurship Week —…
They didn’t want to go corporate; how AI gave brothers the tools to forge their own path, together
Tyler and Garrett Amundsen are using AI to help insurance brokers spend more time on relationships and less time on data, the duo shared. Inspired by conversations around their family’s Kansas City dinner table, as well as the latest tech developments, the brothers launched LightDoc in early 2023 to automate and streamline repetitive tasks that…
He retired after an exit; now this govtech veteran is back in a CFO role for KC-scaled PayIt
As Kansas City-built PayIt scales across North America, a new financial leader is expected to help guide the company in its game-changing efforts to help government agencies modernize, serve their residents, and improve operating efficiency. Steve Kovzan, a nearly 30-year veteran of leadership across government technology and finance spaces, is now chief financial officer at…


