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Now you can pick up hammer, nails and a 3-D printer at Home Depot
 
 

Adrianne Pasquarelli 
CRAIN'S NEW YORK BUSINESS
Published: July 14, 2014 4:46 pm ET
Updated: July 14, 2014 4:57 pm ET


Image By: MakerBot
The 12 Home Depot stores selected for a pilot program selling MakerBot 3-D printers will have specially-trained staff on hand to show how they work.


3-D printing company MakerBot is coming to a hardware store near you.

The Brooklyn-based firm will begin selling its printers at 12 Home Depot stores around the country — six in California, four in Illinois and two in New York — on Monday. The pilot program will offer the microwave-sized MakerBot Replicator printers, priced at $2,899, for sale, as well as the smaller Replicator Minis, which list for $1,375.

"This will open up the whole world of 3-D printing to people who wouldn't otherwise know about it — like moms and dads, electricians, contractors and DIY-home-improvement folks," said MakerBot chief executive Bre Pettis. "It's a good match."

MakerBot printers have been available on Home Depot's website for about a month, and sales have exceeded expectations, Pettis said.  said. The stores will put up specially-designed kiosks where shoppers can see the machines in 3-D action. Trained MakerBot retail staff will also be on-site for the indefinite future in order to put the machines through their paces.

"MakerBot 3-D printers are yet another great technology that can serve particular needs of specific customers," said Todd Furneaux, senior merchant of Atlanta-based Home Depot, in a statement. The 2,264-unit chain reported sales for the first quarter of 2014 of $19.7 billion, a 2.9 percent increase over the year-earlier period, and earnings of $1.4 billion.

MakerBot, which was acquired in a $403 million deal two years ago by Minnesota-based Stratasys, already sells at Microsoft stores across the country as well as at Micro Center and B&H, not to mention at its own store in New York. Mr. Pettis is optimistic about the possibility of expanding merchandise to Home Depots nationwide as 3-D printing goes mainstream.

 
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