Researchers have developed a new carbon-negative building material that could reshape approaches to sustainable construction.
Researchers at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology just invented a building material that could make construction projects stronger and more sustainable—and it’s based on the skeleton of an ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US designs carbon-negative enzyme-based building material to replace concrete
US team has developed Enzymatic Structural Material, a carbon-negative alternative to concrete that turns CO2 into a ...
Researchers at ETH Zurich have developed an astonishing new material: a printable gel that’s alive. Infused with ancient cyanobacteria, this "photosynthetic living material" not only grows but also ...
Construction is on its way to becoming greener. New research describes a method of creating building material that is not only carbon-neutral — meaning it does not produce any carbon emissions — but ...
Discover the top sustainable building materials transforming construction in 2026. From carbon-negative hempcrete to ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Engineers turn waste cardboard into a low-carbon building material
Australia’s construction sector may be on the brink of a quiet revolution, one built from soil, water, and something most ...
Fungi are master engineers capable of building vast networks underground. Now, researchers have harnessed their capabilities to create a living building material that could be a sustainable ...
Engineers have developed a building material that uses the root-like mycelium of a fungus and bacteria cells. Their results show that this material -- which is manufactured with living cells at low ...
Explore how sustainable architecture is evolving through innovative materials and smart technologies, shaping ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results