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Royal Society explores potential of self-healing roads and ‘living bricks’

A block made from “living” building materials by CU Boulder’s Wil Srubar and his colleagues. Credit: CU Boulder College of Engineering & Applied Science

Materials that have the ability to respond to their environment and “heal” buildings and roads have the potential to deliver “major change” in the built environment.

That’s according to a new report by the Royal Society that explores the potential of new and transformative “animate materials” that are created by humans but emulate the properties of living systems.

The Royal Society defines animate materials as being sensitive to their environment and able to adapt to it in different ways to better perform their function.

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