[imagesource: MycoWorks Creative Studio]
Imagine riding some sun-soaked winding road in a shiny new convertible with some influence from the Goombas in Super Mario Bros knitted into the centre console and door cards.
Yes, there is in fact a cool Cadillac of the sorts, made with mushrooms.
Biotechnology company MycoWorks has developed some parts of the recent Cadillac SOLLEI concept car’s interior with a mushy bio-based material.
This latest all-electric concept is a 2+2, coach-built convertible dubbed the ‘Sollei’, which is a name combination of the sun (sol) and leisure (lei).
The company came up with a pretty funky solution for sustainable interior decor and is thus the first Caddy concept that uses bio-based materials crafted from mycelium (the root structure of mushrooms).
MycoWorks hopes to transition from leather to mycelium, cultivating some of their own in their laboratory in San Francisco using their in-house Fine Mycelium technology.
“That’s how this pursuit to swap leather with mycelium bio-based material can begin. First, growing sheets of it. Then, through Cadillac’s SOLLEI car. Soon, across fashion, footwear, furniture, and other automotive applications, until the bio-material spreads everywhere,” reports Design Boom.
There’s also a strong serving of wood veneer in places, complimented with the quilted (and embroidered) cream upholstery and colour-changing leather that radiates unparalleled class and sophistication, per Top Gear.
Other key cabin details include a 55in pillar-to-pillar screen, ‘intuitive’ front and rear command consoles and many illuminated surfaces. The latter will combine with the 126 colour-changing options for the ambient lighting to likely turn the interior into the settings of an average whiskey lounge on a Friday night.
Ironically, you do also get a drinks fridge out back between the rear seats, whose intricately designed occupants are shielded by a glass door.
Class:
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In terms of the design, the low, stretched body is complemented by broad shoulders and long, coupe doors which have buttons in place of conventional handles.
Notice, too, the absence of any real curvature along the body, save for the sleek indentations ahead of the rear wheel arches. This design, coupled with the single-bar taillight and streamlined roofline, creates a strikingly clean and elegant silhouette. The paint finish, ‘Manila Cream,’ is equally captivating, a nod to the classic Caddys of the late ’50s.
Finally, there’s the metallic roof, which Cadillac calls ‘Daybreak’ for its ability to “…let sunlight pour into the interior” – which is literally what’s been written.
No details have been released as yet on the powertrain or even a potential release, but we know it sure is one hell of a fungi.
[source:topgear]
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