Biodigital Micro-Cellular Mashrabiya: Lattice Architectural Microbial Membranes for Sustainable Built Environments
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Background: Revaluation of Mashrabiya as a Soft Membrane and Interactive Environmental Interface
2. Methodology
2.1. The 3D-Printed Biodigital Microbial-Cellular Mashrabiya: The Interactive Living Membrane Feasibility
2.2. The 3D-Printed, Bio-Welded, Myco-Biocomposite Mashrabiya
2.3. The 3D-Bioprinted Bone-Inspired Mashrabiya System
3. Discussion
3.1. Limitations and Future Research Trajectories
3.2. Between 3D Bioprinting and Casting: Future Application of Bioactive Lattice Membranes
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Typical Mashrabiya Key-Criteria | 3D-Printed Myco-Biocomposite Mashrabiya | 3D-Bioprinted Bone-Inspired Mashrabiya |
---|---|---|
Light-intake moderation | Moderately achieved due to the large openings of the lattice curvilinear biodigital bricks design in comparison to the typical Mashrabiya. | Fully achieved varied scale moderation of light intake since this project proposes micro-, meso-, and macro-scale organization of the trabecular-inspired lattice pores, with the added value of the self-organization fractality of the system based on mineralization on the material scale. |
Socio-cultural compliance of the Mashrafiya | Moderately achieved in comparison to the interior camouflage effect of the typical Mashrafiya due to the wider voids in the biodigital brick design. | Fully achieved varied scale diffusion and camouflage of the interior based on the fractal varied scale pores of the material system. |
Air filtration and flow moderation | Achieved with the added value of air filtration due to the designed material mineralization reaction that captures carbon dioxide to produce and precipitate calcium carbonate as a side product of the interaction between the mycelium and the seashell-based biocomposite [13]. | Achieved with the added value of air filtration thanks to the designed material mineralization that captures carbon dioxide in the mineralization pathway of the hydrogel interface reaction with the surrounding air to produce calcium carbonate and hydroxyapatite [20]. |
Air cooling and air-flow moderation requires further experimentation in collaboration with the other architectural elements that facilitate the air flow and circulation inside the building. | ||
Material sustainability | Fully achieved since the myco-biocomposite biodigital bricks are developed from recycled seashells from food waste and edible fungi mycelium (Pleurotus ostreatus) which is identified as a current material in sustainability to exploit waste and cheap microbial cultures in architecture and construction. | Partially achieved. Gelatine and alginate are abundant biopolymers that are affordable and available; however, the 3D bioprinter is less economic democratically. Nevertheless, domestically developed and manufactured bioprinters are a possible solution to overcome the cost of commercially available bioprinters. |
Reproducibility and easy maintenance | The biodigital myco-biocomposite bricks are considered reproducible and self-healing. However, patch-to-patch variations caused by uneven bioagent growth on the replicated bricks can be considered a challenge in the reproducibility of this system. Another challenge is the inoculation-to-growth duration that can last two weeks minimum and requires further study on the system life-cycle in reaching the full mineralization of the system by the proposed reaction. | The biomimetic bone-like material system is reproducible and easily maintained thanks to its easy preparation procedures and autonomous mineralization. Thus, this system is more suitable for application as a biodigital Mashrabiya. |
Lightweight structure | This system achieves an enhanced lightweight structure in comparison to clay and wood. However, further research is required to evaluate the structural and mechanical property variations of the myco-biocomposite material upon mineralization and dense welding by the bioagent (mycelium). | This system achieves a lightweight structure that is based on the material biomimetic morphology of cortical–trabecular hierarchical structural motifs. This qualifies this material system as a fractal load-bearing lightweight system. Further research is needed to study the morphological variation and fractality of the mineralized material, as well as estimating the mechanical property variation chronologically to the mineralization rate and sites. |
Autonomous passive operation | This system is autonomously and passively operating by the effect of the bioagent (mycelium) welding and reinforcing the material while absorbing carbon dioxide in the mineralization reaction, generating a coherent welded system of a mineralized biodigital Mashrabiya. | This system autonomously and passively operates by the effect of the acellular chemical mineralization reaction consuming carbon dioxide in the mineralization of the outer interfaces of the material while providing enhanced mechanical performance and the possibility of encapsulating living cells of useful organisms [20] (for instance, bioluminescent bacteria or algae strains) to add to the sustainability of this biodigital Mashrabiya system by fostering biodiversity. |
Sustainability added values | This system offers wide potential in sustainability functions in the production of food by employing edible mushrooms’ mycelium as applied in this case using the King Oyster Mushroom [13], as well as producing industrially valuable enzymes (e.g., Laccase) according to the fungal strain used to weld the seashell biocomposite [29]. Another possible added value is the generation of bioelectricity based on the oxidation–reduction reaction of the fungal strain used in the bio-welding of the biocomposite which consumes the auxiliary media in the system [29,30]. This can lead to a fully self-sufficient biodigital Mashrabiya that is an integral sustainable solution for an architectural bioactive and functional membrane. | Because of the excellent encapsulation properties of this biomimetic hydrogel, this system can host and maintain the viability of various useful microbial strains such as bioluminescent algae that can produce oxygen, proteins, enzymes, and naturally emitted light [31]. This is currently under experimentation and will be published in a future study. |
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Abdallah, Y.K.; Estevez, A.T. Biodigital Micro-Cellular Mashrabiya: Lattice Architectural Microbial Membranes for Sustainable Built Environments. J 2025, 8, 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/j8020013
Abdallah YK, Estevez AT. Biodigital Micro-Cellular Mashrabiya: Lattice Architectural Microbial Membranes for Sustainable Built Environments. J. 2025; 8(2):13. https://doi.org/10.3390/j8020013
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbdallah, Yomna K., and Alberto T. Estevez. 2025. "Biodigital Micro-Cellular Mashrabiya: Lattice Architectural Microbial Membranes for Sustainable Built Environments" J 8, no. 2: 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/j8020013
APA StyleAbdallah, Y. K., & Estevez, A. T. (2025). Biodigital Micro-Cellular Mashrabiya: Lattice Architectural Microbial Membranes for Sustainable Built Environments. J, 8(2), 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/j8020013