Archive: https://archive.today/LlgE4
From the post:
>Mtamu Kililo is the chief executive of MycoTile in Nairobi, Kenya. Credit: Kang-Chun Cheng for Nature “This photo was taken at the MycoTile waste-processing space at the Kenya Industrial Research and Development Institute in Nairobi. The sacks are full of sugar-cane bagasse, a fibrous material that is left behind when the juice is extracted. Sugar-cane processing factories produce mountains of bagasse as waste. I’m the co-founder and chief executive of MycoTile, which works to produce affordable building materials out of agricultural waste bonded with oyster-mushroom mycelium, a network of tiny filaments that forms a root-like structure for the mushroom.
Archive: https://archive.today/LlgE4
From the post:
>>Mtamu Kililo is the chief executive of MycoTile in Nairobi, Kenya. Credit: Kang-Chun Cheng for Nature
“This photo was taken at the MycoTile waste-processing space at the Kenya Industrial Research and Development Institute in Nairobi. The sacks are full of sugar-cane bagasse, a fibrous material that is left behind when the juice is extracted. Sugar-cane processing factories produce mountains of bagasse as waste.
I’m the co-founder and chief executive of MycoTile, which works to produce affordable building materials out of agricultural waste bonded with oyster-mushroom mycelium, a network of tiny filaments that forms a root-like structure for the mushroom.
(post is archived)