This Mars Colonization Proposal Would 3D Print Biodegradable Fungus Towers that Leave No Trace

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After NASA’s discovery of water beneath the surface of Mars earlier this year, and the subsequent critical and popular success of the movie The Martian, it's safe to say that the planet named after the God of War is all the rage. Those revelations have led to speculative looks at how our neighboring planet could be colonized from numerous designers, such as Norman Foster.

Many of those plans, including those of SpaceX founder Elon Musk, involve dumping Earthen construction materials onto the alien surface, potentially starting an inclination for pollution of our new world before it is even occupied. Spanish architect Alberto Villanueva of IDEA Architecture Office saw this as an opportunity for design to intervene. Using Martian soil and the fungus mycelium, Villanueva proposes a strategy utilizing 3D printing and bioluminescence that has gained the attention of both NASA and the European Space Agency.

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Cite: Patrick Lynch. "This Mars Colonization Proposal Would 3D Print Biodegradable Fungus Towers that Leave No Trace" 14 Feb 2016. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/782087/could-fungus-3d-printers-be-the-solution-to-colonizing-mars> ISSN 0719-8884

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