Search anything

Close search
Back to Revisit DDW24

BioHybrid Device – Grown Technology

The Biohybrid Device is a video game controller grown in living biofilm (SCOBY), embedding inputs / outputs components by the natural morphogenesis

The game controller alone — © Madalina Nicolae and Vivien Roussel

Our biodesign research team at IFT Paris has developed a method for growing hybrid artifacts using biofilm growth. The aim is to eventually replace plastic and move design into a new production paradigm by cultivating artifacts using morphogenesis as a manufacturing process.

BioHybrid Device – Grown Technology

For decades, technological innovation has been agnostic to sustainability constraints. Unfortunately, this is not viable anymore. We need to radically rethink our relationship to materiality and approach of conceiving technology.
What if, in the future, we could biologically grow functional interactive devices? What would they look like ?
The Biohybrid Device is a video game controller created by the fusion of biological and digital manufacturing processes. It blurs the boundaries between living and non-living systems by using the manufacturing process of morphogenesis to encapsulate electrically interactive elements. Thus, the controller slowly takes shape as the symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast grows and reproduces absorbing the conductive elements, sensors and output components into the material.

The Biohybrid Device addresses the sustainability, limits and implications of a biotechnological future, and invites to question the status of objects as well as our current means of production.

Play video

About Vivien Roussel

The Institute for Future Technologies is the transdisciplinary and innovative hub of the Pole Leonard de Vinci. We invent real-world, human-centered technologies with long-term perspectives for our planet. Our innovation activities are structured between three groups : Artificial Lives Group, human-centered ubiquitous technologies; Resilient Futures Group develops sustainable and resilient technologies; tools that empower the lifelong construction of knowledge.
Strijp T+R area, BioArt Laboratories, Oirschotsedijk 14-10 , Map No. A1
Loading map...
Not Wheelchair Accessible
Toilets available