BeAble Capital at Science for Industry 2026
3D printed concrete dimensional letters for the BeAble Capital stand at S4i · Science for Industry 2026, designed to reinforce the physical presence of a Venture Capital fund specialized in Deeptech.
A material identity for a Deeptech Venture Capital fund
Science for Industry is a meeting point between science, industry and investment, focused on accelerating knowledge transfer and the creation of science-based companies. In this context, BeAble Capital participated as a Venture Capital fund specialized in Deeptech and Deep Science.
Aridditive designed and manufactured 3D printed concrete dimensional letters to be integrated into its stand. The piece worked as a brand element, photo support and physical presence within a trade fair environment where innovation, technology and knowledge transfer were central to the narrative.
Dimensional letters in 3D printed concrete
From logo to object
A branding piece that does more than communicate the brand: it makes it visible, tangible and memorable within the trade fair space.




Typography, colour and materiality in a single piece
The design was based on BeAble Capital’s visual universe and its identity as a Deeptech Venture Capital fund. The geometry of the letters was adapted to preserve typographic readability while ensuring clean manufacturing through 3D concrete printing.
The decision to work with two colours reinforced the corporate identity: the exterior maintains the raw white tone characteristic of Aridditive’s concrete, while the interior incorporates BeAble Capital’s corporate green, creating depth and visual contrast.
The result is a piece positioned between graphic design, architectural signage and sculptural object: a brand turned into volume.
Corporate branding with architectural presence
A small-format project with high visual impact, designed to reinforce brand identity within a specialized trade fair environment.
Physical identity
The letters turn a graphic identity into a dimensional piece, creating a more memorable and photogenic presence on the stand.
Two-colour finish
Raw white exterior and corporate green interior to preserve Aridditive’s material language while reinforcing BeAble Capital’s visual identity.
Manufacturing without moulds
3D concrete printing makes it possible to produce customized geometries without moulds, adapted to the typography and requirements of the space.
From graphic design to final piece
A fast, coordinated process to transform the visual identity of the stand into a manufactured, finished piece ready for the trade fair.
Identity analysis
Review of typography, proportions, corporate colour and visual needs for the BeAble Capital stand.
3D design
Adaptation of the letters into a printable volume, maintaining legibility, stability and visual presence.
Printing and finishing
Manufacturing through 3D concrete printing and application of a two-colour raw white and corporate green finish.
Delivery for trade fair
Preparation of the piece for integration into the BeAble Capital stand during Science for Industry 2026.
A brand with volume, texture and depth
The dimensional letters brought a distinctive physical identity to the stand, aligned with an event where technology, applied science and market transfer were at the centre of the narrative.
The piece reinforces BeAble Capital’s positioning through a material language: concrete, digital manufacturing, corporate colour and customized design. A way of communicating investment in Deeptech not only through discourse, but through the object itself.
La Nave · Madrid
Science for Industry 2026 was held at La Nave, the innovation centre of Madrid City Council located at Calle Cifuentes 5, in the Villaverde district. The event brought together stakeholders from the deep science, investment, research and industry ecosystems.
Do you want your brand to have physical presence?
We design and manufacture dimensional letters, identity pieces and architectural signage in 3D printed concrete for trade fairs, corporate headquarters, institutions and singular spaces.
