These Mushroom Bricks Are Up to Twice as Strong as Concrete

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  • Опубликовано: 30 май 2024
  • Fungi are some of the most ancient organisms around. But could they also be the future of construction and building materials? Researchers and companies are looking to turn mushrooms into the building blocks of sustainable homes and workspaces.
    WSJ’s Daniela Hernandez breaks down how fungi are being turned into bricks that rival traditional building materials, like concrete.
    0:00 Why do developers think fungi are the future of building materials?
    0:24 The science behind mushroom bricks
    1:58 How researchers make bricks out of fungi
    2:33 Potential benefits and advantages of fungi bricks versus traditional building materials
    4:16 Production challenges
    I’m Daniela Hernandez, a health and science reporter for WSJ, and on this channel I’ll be covering a variety of subjects from neuroscience to the science of food and public health. If you’re interested in science and health and how cutting edge research impacts our lives, don’t forget to subscribe.
    #Fungi #Construction #DanielaHernandez
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Комментарии • 63

  • @DanielaHernandezWSJ
    @DanielaHernandezWSJ Год назад +17

    Would you live in a house built with mushroom-based materials?

    • @keeler1160
      @keeler1160 Год назад +1

      Will i be tripping out if I eat it?

    • @gokudo-cf5pt
      @gokudo-cf5pt Год назад +2

      Do u know how long the brick can last

    • @ox6903
      @ox6903 Год назад +1

      I would!

    • @andreasmershin5026
      @andreasmershin5026 Год назад +2

      Absolutely! I'd love for these to be available in the US

    • @kingmasterlord
      @kingmasterlord Год назад +1

      I'd build a car body.

  • @anweshgurung2030
    @anweshgurung2030 Год назад +22

    I get hopeful whenever I see such innovative ways, but also sad that they almost never go mainstream.

    • @jenniferc.d.5775
      @jenniferc.d.5775 Год назад +3

      Instead vc money is pouring towards companies that can bring u groceries in 10 mins or less!!

    • @kaleomariz1000
      @kaleomariz1000 Год назад

      It’s usually because such technologies are too expensive to be reproduced in a large scale for the general public.
      For example: it’s perfectly possible for soldiers to be wearing bulletproof uniforms in today’s technology. But it’s too expensive to do that for every single soldier.

  • @listen1st267
    @listen1st267 Год назад +10

    What I'd be most concerned with is if mold or other fungal material would grow on it in even slightly humid environments. Also does it decay over the span of decades when exposed to harsh sunlight, heat, cold, and rain. Plus, would ants, hornets, or beetles make themselves at home in the blocks? Just some things to consider

    • @arkadiuszjendrulek5540
      @arkadiuszjendrulek5540 Год назад +2

      That was my concern as well, on the other hand houses are built using OSB boards, and wood which is both flammable (new types of OSB boards are fire proof though) and may decay due to humidity and pests. I think mycelium could be great material of the future, but years of experimenting and research are needed before we can go full Smurf Village.
      At the moment mycelial panels can last up to 20 years if kept in good conditions. In contact with earth, water and contaminations - probably 6 weeks.

  • @KingOfNaraka
    @KingOfNaraka Год назад +13

    Sir, your house does not have termite problem. It has yeast infection.

  • @Gikarin.Gamemaster
    @Gikarin.Gamemaster Год назад +4

    I think Hemp blocks are just easier to switch to and more available and have great benefits too.

  • @beauxlohjab
    @beauxlohjab Год назад +12

    Is it inert? Cause thats one of the selling point of concrete. Also, you usually reinforce concrete with steel, to improve its strength. Never is an infratructure built solely on concrete.
    And come on, you guys smashed a hollow block vs a solid mushroom block.

    • @jurgenparkour9337
      @jurgenparkour9337 Год назад

      Well, they have to make those sweet sweet views, mate🤷‍♂️

    • @sebastianflynn1746
      @sebastianflynn1746 Год назад +2

      Those two blocks weigh the same and have about the same use case, it's about visually demonstrating a point. there will have been real compression and tensile testing done but seeing two block crumble under a hydraulic press isn't as visually impressive as a sledgehammer.

    • @ef8725
      @ef8725 Год назад +1

      They should make a hollow mushroom block

    • @aarontuplin
      @aarontuplin Год назад +1

      @@sebastianflynn1746 the mushroom block was solid, twice as tall, twice as wide, and half as long. It has everything going for it in that "test"

  • @bobbob-vw4cc
    @bobbob-vw4cc Год назад +14

    how does it fair in wet/humid states?

    • @viva9284
      @viva9284 Год назад +4

      It gets mushy then you eat it for dinner.. call it homecooked

    • @ef8725
      @ef8725 Год назад +1

      Mushrooms will grow out of it

    • @Schwarzy22
      @Schwarzy22 Год назад +2

      Did u miss the part where they dehydrate it

    • @forgivensign
      @forgivensign Год назад +2

      @@Schwarzy22 biomass can easily be rehydrated

    • @forgivensign
      @forgivensign Год назад +2

      @@ef8725 hahaha unless there were spores left, no mushrooms would come from just the chitosan

  • @LawNOrderHumanRightsUnit
    @LawNOrderHumanRightsUnit Год назад +2

    This is fascinating news for mega projects bc we can build bigger and more stable structures than we can currently with traditional concrete and steel alone. What a time to be alive!

  • @josephvinoth6215
    @josephvinoth6215 Год назад +5

    Can it withstand termites?

  • @kamalchandramoney3541
    @kamalchandramoney3541 Год назад +2

    How long does it last!? Is it possible to coat it with epoxy to increase its longevity?

  • @TheHammycare
    @TheHammycare 5 месяцев назад +1

    Im sure this is information that they are intentionally not releasing, but ill give it a shot anyway. Does anyone know what invasive bush is used in the substrate?/what mushroom mycelium they are using? My assumption is reishi

  • @teoengchin
    @teoengchin Год назад +3

    Most bricks are for non-structural applications, so comprehensive strength is not that important

  • @gingerrivadeneira6815
    @gingerrivadeneira6815 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for your video, Daniela! Have the architects tested the mushroom brick to other environmental conditions like rain and humidity? Will the brick get moldy?

  • @SpitfireMkIIFan
    @SpitfireMkIIFan Год назад +1

    Instead of hitting a lightweight hollow concrete block with like 3cm thickness maybe try to crush a proper concrete block of 40cm like the fungi block was.

  • @aroundandround
    @aroundandround Год назад +1

    3:45 It looked to me like it would just slowly but surely burn over time. Unlike concrete or brick.

  • @aroundandround
    @aroundandround Год назад +2

    I would use this for my house just to be able to say I live in a mushroom house.

  • @Mechaneer
    @Mechaneer Год назад +3

    I want a house built out of concrete and hemp.

  • @robertwong2412
    @robertwong2412 Год назад +2

    This would be dangerous to those with chitin allergies.

  • @ayoolowoleru8251
    @ayoolowoleru8251 Год назад

    Aren’t those blocks cinder block

  • @user-sz9wm4rm5c
    @user-sz9wm4rm5c Год назад +2

    Is this mushroom brick flammable?

    • @thragblan
      @thragblan Год назад +2

      Did you watch the video? She literally tries to set fire to it

    • @user-sz9wm4rm5c
      @user-sz9wm4rm5c Год назад

      @@thragblan yes but the bricks can hold big fire, will this material perform the same?

  • @JN-ov1nv
    @JN-ov1nv Год назад +2

    👏

  • @dwayne_
    @dwayne_ Год назад +2

    You said Namibia?

  • @dweeds
    @dweeds Год назад

    Next time you will see the Shaolin monks perform with mushrooms

    • @misterguts
      @misterguts Год назад

      蘑菇砖可以击败少林僧侣

  • @bad4643
    @bad4643 Год назад +1

    Bio degradable is my biggest concern lol

  • @user-ls6qk7cx7f
    @user-ls6qk7cx7f 3 месяца назад

    It's rots is the problem

  • @damiangrzywacz6739
    @damiangrzywacz6739 Год назад +1

    Yes. I can eat it if I was hungry.

  • @kunalm2008gmail
    @kunalm2008gmail Год назад +2

    Insects will eat it away

    • @ricardynonsant9690
      @ricardynonsant9690 Год назад

      That was my first thought. What if some enzyme start eating or some insects

    • @kunalm2008gmail
      @kunalm2008gmail Год назад

      @@ricardynonsant9690 termites love wood

    • @spacetoast7783
      @spacetoast7783 Год назад +1

      They do that to plain wood as well.

    • @listen1st267
      @listen1st267 Год назад

      @@spacetoast7783 which is why many people prefer brick, concrete, or vinyl-sided homes

  • @andreasmershin5026
    @andreasmershin5026 Год назад +2

    A how-to guide: ruclips.net/video/x5HL2CPlZpA/видео.html

  • @davepennington3573
    @davepennington3573 2 месяца назад

    I'm calling BS on this. Mr Maurer said the bricks are 2x stronger than concrete and he gives 26 MPa (3,771 psi) as their strongest formula. The minimum compression strength for concrete is 2,500 psi. Do the math. And the sledgehammer test is a joke, look at the blocks! The concrete block has large voids, the mushroom block has no voids.
    Of course the cost is too high, and until those bricks are waterproof and affordable no one will want to buy them.
    This kind of story is only good for one thing: to prove how bad our media really is.

  • @vladnickul
    @vladnickul Год назад

    Twice as Strong as Concrete :)))))))))))) 102% fairytales

  • @googooly1
    @googooly1 Год назад +4

    Innovative yes, not feasible whatsoever. It doesn't matter how unique the product is, try building a tower with it!

  • @airpods4
    @airpods4 Год назад

    How about instead of saw dust, use concrete mix it with mycelium