This New Building Is Made From Mushrooms That Actually Clean the Air

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The Growing Pavillion — a building in the Netherlands made from mushrooms — cleans the air as it grows.

Produced by creative organization Company New Heroes and biotechnology company Krown Design, the biobased building — put in place for Dutch Design Week — was built using only materials that grow on this earth, including timber and mycelium.

Mycelium — the root structure for mushrooms — is a natural, workable material. According to Krown Design, to create the building, it filled molds with a hemp waste substrate for the mycelium to grow on. It took four days for the mycelium to fill the mold. It then pulled the material from the mold and dried it in an oven to kill the mycelium.

According to Krown, the result is a “strong, light” product, which is shock-absorbing, fire retardant, and provides insulation.

Mycelium captures CO2 as it grows. | @biobased.creations

New Sustainable Building Solutions

Company New Heroes believes natural building materials are essential in the fight against the climate crisis.

“Social challenges such as climate change, subsidence, CO2 emissions, and the scarcity of fossil fuels require new, sustainable solutions,” Diana van Bokhoven — creator of Company New Heroes — told LIVEKINDLY. “The call for a more biobased and circular economy is becoming increasingly necessary.”

Concrete is the most widely used man-made material in existence, but its key ingredient, cement, has a huge impact on the environment. It is responsible for producing eight percent of the world’s CO2 emissions.

Mycelium, however, helps the environment. As it grows, it captures twice its weight in carbon dioxide.

During Dutch Design Week, more than 75,000 people — including industry professionals and government figures — visited The Growing Pavillion. In van Bokhoven’s view, the project is the first step on a long journey towards changing our built environment.

She explained, “For now, good materials alone are not enough to make large-scale applications possible. Think about scaling up production, appropriate regulations, innovative designers, and conscious consumers.”

“With The Growing Pavillion and through this atlas, we put this conversation on the world’s agenda and facilitate it,” she added. “This is an essential step in order to achieve the desired change in thinking and acting.”


This post was last modified on December 15, 2020 6:25 am

Charlotte Pointing

Senior Editor, UK | Southsea, United Kingdom Charlotte writes about sustainable beauty, fashion, food, and culture. She has a bachelor's degree in history and a postgraduate certificate in cultural heritage.

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Charlotte Pointing