Today’s Solutions: May 08, 2026

If we want to build a sustainable future, we may have to revisit what it is we’re actually building things out of. And though the science around the idea is just beginning to emerge, one prime candidate may be using actual living materials like fungus. Or concrete churned out by tiny microbial factories.

Will Srubar, a University of Colorado Boulder materials and engineering researcher, argues in a new The Conversation essay that, living, self-growing, and self-repairing structures may be our best bet to green up the construction industry’s act.

“Living architecture is moving from the realm of science fiction into the laboratory as interdisciplinary teams of researchers turn living cells into microscopic factories,” wrote Srubar, who’s published a number of academic papers on living materials over the last five months. Developing living materials, supposedly, wouldn’t just cut financial costs of repairs and assembly, but also, do away with many of the environmental tolls of manufacturing conventional building materials.

Of course, pivoting to living materials would require a massive paradigm shift, even if scientists figured out how to make these materials both practical and cost-effective. In fact, that might be the hardest part; getting architects and designers to actually consider living materials—as we see with the example of concrete being made from tiny microbes.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

The Big Catch-Up vaccinated 18 million children in two years

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Before any vaccine can protect a child, someone has to reach them. Around 12.3 million of the children ...

Read More

4 reasons your lawn looks thin this spring and how to fix them

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Most lawn care advice focuses on the grass itself: the seed variety, the mowing height, the fertilizer schedule. ...

Read More

This simple tip will increase the gut health benefits of the probiotic foods ...

For those of us who crave the tangy delights of probiotic foods like kimchi, sauerkraut, and kombucha, the mere thought can set our taste ...

Read More

35 years later: Tracy Chapman is first Black woman to win CMA Song of the Year

Tracy Chapman makes history at the Country Music Awards (CMAs), becoming the first Black woman to win the coveted Song of the Year award with ...

Read More