03 — Bio-Construction
Houses grown, not built. Architecture that lives, breathes, and self-repairs — programmed from the ground up using the oldest network on Earth.
The Foundation
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
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.
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.
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.
"The house of the future will not be built. It will be grown."The SinByo Thesis