GOING GREEN
Industrial-Strength Fungus
By ADAM FISHER Monday, Feb. 08,
2010
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1957474,00.html
Fibers form a sturdy network
called a mycelium.
Philip Ross
At an organic farm
just outside Monterey, Calif., a super-eco building material is
growing in dozens of darkened shipping containers. The farm is named
Far West Fungi, and its rusting containers are full of all sorts of
mushrooms--shiitake, reishi and pom-pom, to name a few. But Philip
Ross, an artist, an inventor and a seriously obsessed amateur
mycologist, isn't interested in the fancy caps we like to eat. What
he's after are the fungi's thin, white rootlike fibers. Underground,
they form a vast network called a mycelium. Far West Fungi's dirt-free
hothouses pack in each mycelium so densely that it forms a mass of
bright white spongy matter.
Mycelium doesn't
taste very good, but once it's dried, it has some remarkable
properties. It's nontoxic, fireproof and mold- and water-resistant,
and it traps more heat than fiberglass insulation. It's also stronger,
pound for pound, than concrete. In December, Ross completed what is
believed to be the first structure made entirely of mushroom. (Sorry,
the homes in the fictional Smurf village don't count.) The 500 bricks
he grew at Far West Fungi were so sturdy that he destroyed many a
metal file and saw blade in shaping the 'shrooms into an archway 6 ft.
(1.8 m) high and 6 ft. wide. Dubbed Mycotectural Alpha, it is
currently on display at a gallery in Germany.
Nutty as "mycotecture" sounds, Ross may be onto something
bigger than an art project. A promising start-up named Ecovative is
building a 10,000-sq.-ft. (about 930 sq m) myco-factory in Green
Island, N.Y. "We see this as a whole new material, a woodlike
equivalent to plastic," says CEO Eben Bayer. The three-year-old
company has been awarded grants from the EPA and the National Science
Foundation, as well as the Department of Agriculture--because its
mushrooms feast on empty seed husks from rice or cotton. "You
can't even feed it to animals," says Bayer of this kind of
agricultural waste. "It's basically trash."
After the husks
are cooked, sprayed with water and myco-vitamins and seeded with
mushroom spores, the mixture is poured into a mold of the desired
shape and left to grow in a dark warehouse. A week or two later, the
finished product is popped out and the material rendered biologically
inert. The company's first product, a green alternative to Styrofoam,
is taking on the packaging industry. Called Ecocradle, it is set to be
shipped around a yet-to-be-disclosed consumer item this
spring.
One of the
beauties of Ecocradle is that unlike Styrofoam--which is hard to
recycle, let alone biodegrade--this myco-material can easily serve as
mulch in your garden. Ecovative's next product, Greensulate, will
begin targeting the home-insulation market sometime next year. And
according to Bayer's engineering tests, densely packed mycelium is
strong enough to be used in place of wooden beams. "It's not so
far-out," he says of Ross's art house. So could Bayer see himself
growing a mushroom house and living in it? "Well"--he
hesitates--"maybe we'd start with a doghouse."