Stranger Things becomes real! Scientists create ‘living walls’ that grow and heal themselves |

Stranger Things becomes real! Scientists create ‘living walls’ that grow and heal themselves

Concrete has been the backbone of construction for centuries. Roads, bridges, skyscrapers, and all of it rely on the same old inert material. It is hard, durable, and predictable. But a new material is quietly challenging that norm. It grows, breathes, and even heals its own cracks. Scientists have created a living wall material that behaves more like a tiny ecosystem than a traditional building block. It looks almost like science fiction, yet it has already been used in large-scale installations. Unlike regular concrete, this material changes over time. It captures carbon, builds itself up, and responds to its environment. And while it might not replace concrete tomorrow, it hints at a very different future for architecture.

Inside the Canada Pavilion: Walls that live, breathe, and require daily care

According to ArchDaily, at the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale, visitors to the Canada Pavilion saw something unusual. The walls were soft, textured, almost organic. They were not just for show but these structures, called Picoplanktonics, were embedded with living cyanobacteria. That meant the installation required daily care. Light, temperature, humidity, all of it had to be just right. If the microbes failed, the structure itself would weaken. The pavilion was more like a greenhouse than a building. It seems strange to think of a wall needing attention, but that is exactly what makes the concept exciting. Architecture that lives. Architecture that breathes.So how does it actually work? Tiny cyanobacteria sit inside a printable hydrogel. They photosynthesise, turning sunlight and carbon dioxide into biomass. Over time, they grow and multiply, slowly changing the material around them. Within a month, samples gained roughly 36% more mass than non-living controls. That increase is the result of two processes. One is straightforward biological growth. The other is microbially induced carbonate precipitation, or MICP. The microbes create alkaline conditions that convert dissolved ions into solid minerals. Over time, those minerals build up, reinforcing the structure from the inside. The wall literally becomes harder as it ages.

Carbon capture and the surprising role of shape in living walls

This material does more than self-repair. It captures carbon. According to the research published in Nature, titled, ‘Dual carbon sequestration with photosynthetic living materials‘, early tests showed it absorbed about 2.2 milligrams of CO₂ per gram of hydrogel in the first month. It may not sound like much. But after over a year, the total stored carbon reached roughly 26 milligrams per gram, mostly in stable mineral form. It works slowly. Experts note that industrial systems are faster, but they also require energy and chemicals. This living wall works with sunlight and air. That simplicity might be valuable if it can scale up. Buildings could passively help fight climate change while still serving their normal functions.One surprising finding is that shape affects performance. Flat blocks of hydrogel are not ideal. They block light, limit airflow, and reduce bacterial activity. So researchers tried lattice structures, porous forms, even coral-inspired textures. Some designs increased volume while maintaining surface area. That allowed the cyanobacteria inside to stay active and healthy. The pavilion’s unusual look was not just for aesthetics. Every curve, every hole was functional. Living materials need space, light, and exchange to survive.

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