InventWood’s Superwood: The Steel-Crushing, Game-Changing Material Hitting Production NOW
This Ain’t Your Grandpa’s Lumber – It’s a Building Material Revolution
Forget everything you know about wood. What if I told you there’s a material 10x stronger than steel by weight, fire-resistant, and gorgeous enough for high-end architecture? This isn’t sci-fi – it’s rolling off production lines THIS SUMMER.
“The cellulose nanocrystal is actually stronger than a carbon fiber. We’re not just making wood stronger – we’re redefining construction materials.”
Alex Lau, CEO of InventWood
From Lab Curiosity to Industry Disruptor
Back in 2018, University of Maryland’s Liangbing Hu cracked the code on transforming ordinary timber into a supermaterial. But here’s what most tech stories won’t tell you:
- From 7 days to hours: Initial production took over a week – now it’s faster than baking a pizza
- $15M war chest: Grantham Foundation-led funding to scale production
- First targets: Building facades (with structural beams coming next)
How They Turn Pine into a Titan
The magic happens in three knockout punches:
- Food-grade chemistry: Modifies lignin (nature’s glue) using safe chemicals
- Hydrogen bond boost: Compression creates molecular handshakes that won’t let go
- 4x density = 10x strength: Physics-defying performance gains
Why Contractors Will Be Fighting for This
Check these specs that make steel look weak:
Superwood’s Killer Features:
- 50% stronger tensile strength than steel
- Class A fire rating
- Rot/pest resistant
- Stabilized for outdoor use
- Rich tropical hardwood aesthetics
- 90% less carbon than concrete/steel
The Future is Growing on Trees
InventWood’s roadmap reads like a builder’s wishlist:
- Phase 1 (Now): High-end facades and decking
- Phase 2: Structural beams that don’t need finishing
- Endgame: Replace 90% of carbon-intensive building materials
“Imagine I-beams beautiful enough for showrooms. That’s not future tech – our first production batches prove it’s possible today.”
Alex Lau demonstrating Superwood samples
Bottom line: The construction industry is about to get wood in ways it never imagined. Buildings will be stronger, greener, and more beautiful – and it all starts this summer.