3D printingmistakesarchitectural modelstips
2 min readRitn3D

7 Common Mistakes When 3D Printing House Models (And How to Avoid Them)

Avoid these 7 common mistakes when 3D printing architectural models — wrong scale, thin walls, bad supports, and more. Save time and filament.

Mistake 1: Wrong scale

The most common error. Your model looks perfect on screen but prints either microscopic or larger than the bed.

Fix: Calculate before printing. At 1:100, a 12m house becomes 12cm. Check the slicer preview dimensions match expectations. See our scale guide.

Mistake 2: Walls too thin

At small scales, interior walls can drop below your nozzle diameter. The slicer silently skips them.

Fix: Ensure walls are at least 0.8mm for FDM, 0.5mm for resin. Ritn3D auto-thickens walls to printable minimums.

Mistake 3: No supports for overhangs

Window openings and door lintels create overhangs that sag without support structures.

Fix: Enable supports touching buildplate in your slicer. Use tree supports for cleaner removal around small openings.

Mistake 4: Wrong material choice

ABS warps on open printers. PLA deforms in heat. Resin is brittle if dropped.

Fix: PLA for indoor display models. PETG for handled models. Resin for maximum detail at small scales. See our material guide.

Mistake 5: Poor print orientation

Printing a house model on its side creates weak walls that snap along layer lines.

Fix: Always print upright (floor on bed, walls vertical). This puts layer lines horizontal along walls, matching how real walls bear load.

Mistake 6: Not checking the STL

Corrupt meshes, inverted normals, and non-manifold edges cause slicer errors and failed prints.

Fix: Run the STL through PrusaSlicer's auto-repair or Microsoft 3D Builder before printing. Ritn3D exports manifold-correct STL files that skip this step.

Mistake 7: Ignoring print bed size

A 1:50 model of a large house can exceed 300mm — larger than most consumer print beds.

Fix: Check model dimensions in your slicer before printing. Split oversized models at logical boundaries (room groups, building wings) and glue post-print.

The shortcut

Most of these mistakes come from manual STL preparation. Ritn3D handles scaling, wall thickening, and mesh optimization automatically. Upload a floor plan, download a print-ready STL, and focus on the printing — not the prep.