03 — Bio-Construction

Mycelium
Architecture

Houses grown, not built. Architecture that lives, breathes, and self-repairs — programmed from the ground up using the oldest network on Earth.

Organic structures

The Foundation

The world's oldest
network

Beneath every forest floor lies a network older than the internet, older than civilization, older than most animal life. Mycelium — the vegetative body of fungi — forms vast underground webs that connect, communicate, and build with a sophistication that humbles our engineering.

A single cubic inch of soil can contain eight miles of mycelium threads. These networks process nutrients, decompose waste, and construct complex three-dimensional structures with zero energy input beyond what the organism harvests from its environment.

SinByo's vision: program these networks. Give them blueprints. Feed them waste. Watch them build.

Scale

From furniture
to cities

Living Furniture

Chairs, tables, and shelving grown in molds from mycelium composites. Stronger than concrete by weight, fire-resistant, and fully biodegradable. Furniture that was never manufactured — it was cultivated.

Furniture
Architecture

Living Buildings

Full-scale structures grown from engineered mycelium that consumes agricultural waste as feedstock. Self-insulating walls, self-healing foundations, integrated air filtration — buildings with immune systems.

Living Cities

The ultimate ambition: entire urban districts grown from programmed biological matter. Infrastructure that metabolizes its own waste, generates energy, and adapts to the needs of its inhabitants like a living organism.

City skyline
"The house of the future will not be built. It will be grown."
The SinByo Thesis

Next Vision

Augmented Catalysts

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