Tech
Tech Traveler’s Guide to Austin: Where to Stay, Eat, and Recharge
																								
												
												
											
There’s no denying that an Austin tech scene, which has been simmering for decades, has reached a boiling point in the past few years. As of 2023, tech jobs accounted for 16 percent of all jobs in Austin—almost double the national average, according to the Austin Chamber of Commerce. Tech giants like Apple, Google, and Oracle all have a presence in the Texas capital, and startups like Mio, Closinglock, and MadeIn are garnering hype and VC funding. The Wall Street Journal may be hedging its bets on the hype it previously bestowed upon the city in the wake of the pandemic, but Austin persists as a kind of Babylon for burned-out techies who are tired of the Silicon Valley rat race.
The scrappy “Keep Austin Weird” era is on the wane, but there’s still plenty that feels authentic and lovable in this once-sleepy college town that was content with doing its own thing in the shadows of nearby metropolises like Dallas and Houston. If your heart isn’t dead-set on reliving the hazy glory days of the city portrayed in Richard Linklater’s classic 1993 film Dazed and Confused, you’re all but guaranteed to have a blast while bar-hopping, basking in the sun, and stuffing your face with some of the best barbecue in the world. And of course there’s live music. So, so much live music.
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Where to Stay
Video: Pete Cottell
Austin’s tech scene initially caught a spark in the sprawling hills west of the city—hence the “Silicon Hills” tag—but the influx of Gen X and millennial workers has created an explosion of incubators, coworking spaces, and urban lifestyle hubs that are more centrally located than the environs preferred by the suburbanized old guard that came before them. Whether you prefer a quick drive to the office park or a quick walk to your new “coffice” for the day, our picks have you covered.
1901 San Antonio St., (512) 473-8900
Situated near the Texas State Capitol on the Southwest corner of the University of Texas at Austin, the Otis is a comfortable middle ground between a boutique hotel and an international chain operation. It’s far enough from the commotion of both downtown and campus to feel calm, yet just a stone’s throw from both. The rooftop pool is clutch for winding down with a Lone Star after a long day of meetings, which can be conveniently hosted onsite at one of the six event spaces, and Acre 41 is the kind of multiuse restaurant that’s great for checking emails over coffee in the morning and brokering big deals over a Texas ribeye at night.
700 San Jacinto St., (512) 476-3700
Austin is growing upward at an unprecedented clip, but until it starts putting up New York–style pencil skyscrapers, the Omni Hotel stands out as one of the most iconic pieces of its skyline. This glistening 20-story marvel is just a few blocks from the core of Austin’s entertainment district on West 6th Street, though you wouldn’t be faulted for hardly leaving the property if a bar crawl on “Dirty 6th” isn’t your thing. The rooftop pool offers stunning views of the city and beyond, and the three onsite restaurants provide an array of dining options suitable for all occasions.
1108 E 6th St., (737) 205-8888
Many maverick tech workers are in the sole proprietor/bootstraps phase of their career, which means cutting costs while still feeling luxe (or at least presenting as such) is important. East Austin Hotel offers traditional rooms for a slight upgrade, or you can save some serious cash by booking a “cabin” room with a suite of shared private bathrooms in the middle of the floor. You’ll still have access to the pool in the middle of the property, and the hotel’s proximity to the laid-back, neighborhood-y vibe of East 6th Street makes it a great pick for aspiring professionals who would prefer to commingle with locals rather than pound the pavement with office drones.
Photograph: Sarah Kerver/Getty Images
605 Davis St., (512) 542-5300
Rainey Street ain’t what it used to be, but this charming enclave of bungalows turned bars still packs more character into a tiny city block than most midsize cities can muster in their entire downtown footprint. It’s a solid all-purpose pick for moderate luxury in the middle of one of Austin’s most charming and memorable downtown-adjacent neighborhoods.
10901 Domain St., (855) 596-3398
Most out-of-towners would be quite bummed to find out their work trip in Austin is centered around a lifestyle mall that’s a 45-minute drive from downtown, but The Domain is actually a pretty great place to spend a few days if duty calls. It’s a simulacrum of a walkable city right near blue-chip operations like Apple and Chase, so you might as well lean into the whole thing and shack up at a cool hotel that doesn’t feel like a suburban motor inn off the freeway. Lone Star Court is fashioned in the likeness of a hill country lodge, with a pair of conjoined courtyards that center around a teal oval-shaped pool with its own bar and lounge.
7415 Southwest Pkwy., Building 8, Suite 100, (512) 551-4009
Nestled atop a main thoroughfare in the “Silicon Hills” of West Austin is a shiny new AC Hotel that checks all the boxes a techy business traveler might have. It’s a short drive to heavyweights like AMD and Dell, and a handful of VCs like LiveOak and Cavvy dot the rolling hills that are on stunning display from the pool and the rooftop bar. The adjacent strip mall offers handy essentials like a local market that serves coffee and sandwiches all day, an upscale Mexican spot with great happy hour specials, and a movie theater with a bar that’s a great place to kill a few hours between meetings.
Where to Work
Photograph: Pete Cottell
Whether you’re looking for a quiet desk for the day or a parachute into a bustling tech-y social scene, the variety of coworking options available in Austin is staggering and has something for everyone. Before you walk in off the street, we strongly suggest checking their website for availability and pricing, and while you’re surfing the web, you might as well check out Austin Coworking and Deskpass, as they’re excellent resources for updates on events, newcomers to the scene, and deals on participating offices.
310 Comal St., Floor 2, (512) 399-6320
Bond Collective is a solid choice for the post-hipster techies who prefer the laid-back vibe of East Austin over the corporate thrum of downtown or the West Austin hills. Day passes start at $35 for quick drop-ins, and monthly memberships offer access to almost all Bond Collective locations in the US—with many locations in New York, Philly, and the DC area—along with 24/7 access and ad hoc conference rooms if needed.
701 Brazos St., (512) 548-9675
This startup social hall functions more so as an IRL hub for meetups and events for the entrepreneur set, but it also offers quite a few open coworking events throughout the week if you prefer a more lively and interactive environment while you tap away at your laptop. You might meet your next full-stack developer here, or (more realistically) you might swill some beers and play pop-a-shot with some dudes who ditched California for the booming startup scene the Texas capital has been riding high on for several years now.
1700 S Lamar Blvd., #338, (512) 596-2683
Tucked in the back of a new build in the cozy Zilker/South Lamar neighborhood is Fibercove, a bright and buzzy coworking space that boasts off-street parking, a Google Fiber-powered network, a cafe, and a podcast studio where you and your best buds can chat about food and politics with the hopes of going viral. Local favorites like Odd Duck, Tiki Tatsu-Ya, and an Alamo Drafthouse outpost are within a short walk, and the space shares walls with a location of the boozy brunch chain Snooze if mimosas and chilaquiles are in order.
Where to Get Your Coffee
Courtesy of Radio Coffee and Beer
1115 E 11th St.
Austin is home to a staggering number of excellent coffee shops that focus solely on brewing great coffee. It’s also chock-full of multiuse all-day drinking spots where the hours melt away and your taste for a cortado in the morning and a cafe de cachapa in the afternoon is joyously accommodated. Radio Rosewood falls in the latter camp. Coffee (and coffee cocktails, no judgment) start flowing at 7 am daily, and the Shortwave Diner truck parked outside slings a variety of diner staples like smash burgers, hot dogs, and breakfast sandwiches throughout most of Radio Rosewood’s generous hours of operation.
Multiple locations
Figure 8 is one of the most popular purveyors for cafés that don’t roast their own beans, which makes it easy to find just about anywhere, but the opportunity to try its outstanding espresso and drip coffee right at the source is one you must enjoy if possible. This low-slung rectangle of a building sits on the edge of a quiet residential area, but the inside is always buzzing gently with activity and caffeination. Order a shot made from African or Central American beans if possible, and keep an eye out for a bin of fresh breakfast tacos near the register if you need a snack.
Multiple locations
With a decade-plus of explosive growth in their rear view, it’s fair to say Houndstooth is akin to third-wave roasters like Stumptown, Blue Bottle, and Intelligentsia, all of which are synonymous with their respective cities. Their downtown location lives in the lobby of an office tower right smack in the middle of Austin’s business district, which makes it a great place to sip a cortado between meetings or escape the grind of the workday with a cold brew and a croissant.
1505 Town Creek Dr.
Nature is healing, and one of Austin’s most beloved all-night hangs has finally resumed its 24/7 schedule. As its name denotes, The Buzz Mill is a lumber mill–themed coffee bar that’s great for late-night study sessions, marathon coding sprints, work drinks with the crew, or a mellow place to sip on a drink or two while you wait for whatever it is you were doing all day to flush out of your system.
Where to Eat
Photograph: Pete Cottell
1201 S Lamar Blvd.
This South Lamar bistro casts a wide net in terms of influence, with contemporary riffs on Texan comfort classics serving as the backbone of the dozen-or-so items that populate its menu. Look no further than the climax of their current dinner offerings—a wagyu strip steak that’s plated with tater tots and masa queso—for a cheeky tell of what to expect from their delightfully low-brow iterations on high-minded chefiness.
1900 S 1st St.
Austin is located in Texas, and people in Texas love animal products. On the other hand, Austin is also a hot spot for well-heeled progressives, which means the vegetarian and vegan food is on point if you know where to look. Bouldin Creek Cafe is a funky and colorful mainstay for eco-friendly fare that’s elegant enough for a dinner date yet also crunchy enough to please a table of hungover hippies who went a bit too hard at the day rave that dragged on until 4 in the morning.
2330 W N Loop Blvd.
For 50 years this North Austin cochina has gifted Texans with upscale Mexican cuisine that joyfully transcends what your average taqueria-goer imagines when food from south of the border comes to mind. Here you’ll find stunning platters of wagyu tacos, tangy ceviches, and decadent mole that converge in a way that suggests what might happen when Mexico City answers the question of what a brasserie might look like in a hyper-modern American metropolis.
2305 E 7th St.
Founded by Joe Avila in 1962, this humble East Austin diner infuses hearty brunch fare with stately Mexican tradition. The proper move here is a breakfast plate that typically includes eggs, beans, potatoes, tortillas, and your choice of protein. Their signature dish—the Joey Rocha Plate—is centered around a rich pork guisada and sausage or bacon and is easily one of the most crave-worthy and iconic breakfast dishes in all of Austin. Smaller appetites are accommodated by a full lineup of tacos, including a handful of breakfast tacos alongside more traditional two-biters like barbacoa, chicharrone, and migas.
4710 E 5th St.
Justine’s is an Austin-ified update of the French brasserie model of casual indulgence. Its kitchen serves up decadence until midnight on weekends, offering the pre- or post-party set decadent burgers, frites, seafood dishes, and a few stunning salad options that pair wonderfully with an expansive list of cocktails, aperitifs, and wines from all over the price spectrum.
Best Barbecue
Photograph: Pete Cottell
Anointing one barbecue spot out of the hundreds in the area as “the best” is a fool’s errand, so a quick-and-dirty list of knockouts that suit a variety of needs is more appropriate. Know that most have a line well before they open, brisket sells out quickly, and very few are open more than three or four days a week. Terry Black’s is an exception to all of these rules, with generous hours, a massive seating area, and an industrious pit that makes it easy to score award-winning brisket for the entire crew at 7 pm on a Monday. La Barbecue is a consensus favorite among chefs and influencers, earning high marks for its outstanding sausage and brisket, along with its approachability—online ordering is clutch when you don’t have the time or patience for the line. KG BBQ has the most unique story on this list, with a charismatic Egyptian pitmaster who adds a Middle Eastern spin to familiar Texas staples in the form of sumac rice bowls topped with brisket, barbecue lamb pitas, and cardamom and pistachio rice pudding for dessert.
Best Breakfast Tacos
Similar to barbecue, there is no best breakfast taco spot in Austin. Most locals choose based on proximity and reliability, while natural selection weeds out the bad ones in short order. That said, the handful of locations in the Veracruz All Natural empire offer something for everyone all over town, and most of them are situated in a truck park that usually has coffee, pastries, and other local goodies on offer courtesy of the other vendors. Vaquero Taquero is a solid pick for folks situated near UT or downtown, and the Bouldin Creek location of El Tacorrido slings breakfast tacos (and other styles) out of a walk-up/drive-thru window every day from 7am to midnight.
Bars and Breweries
Photograph: Pete Cottell
1133 E 11th St.
This cheeky East Austin post-dive ingests the memories of every Midwestern transplant’s favorite windowless dump and polishes them up real nice like, in a convivial nod to the great American institution that is the neighborhood watering hole. Ice cold lager and top-tier boozy slushies wash down satisfying pub grub courtesy of the Delray Cafe truck outside, which slings smash burgers, Detroit-style coneys, and all manner of fried fare until the wee hours of the evening.
406 Walsh St.
Better Half is a great place to start the morning with a breakfast sandwich and a coffee, put your head down, and grind away on your laptop for hours, then celebrate a job well done with a draft cocktail and another sandwich. Its light and airy aesthetic, plus its massive outdoor footprint, make this Old West Austin bar/café hybrid an inviting hub for productivity, lounging our outright shenanigans if the mood strikes.
3901 Promontory Point Dr.
While Austin has seen no shortage of IPA factories come to fruition in the past decade, it’s fitting that its most significant opening rolled into town by way of the OP beer scene in Portland, Oregon. Founded in 2019 by a pair of Breakside veterans, the expansive, quasi-suburban footprint of Meanwhile brewing manages to be peak Austin in its amenities, with an massive outdoor space that boasts a stage, picnic tables galore, a kids play area, and a fleet of food trucks that puts many stand-alone truck parks to shame. The beer is also excellent, with a strong focus on crushable lagers, hazies, and the particular brand of West Coast IPAs that Breakside has brewed for award-winning results since the early 2010’s.
Tech
Electric vehicles could strain Quebec’s power grid
														
Electrification of vehicles is necessary to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but in Quebec the increasing weight of the battery-powered vehicles could cause electricity demand to rise well beyond projections.
That’s the conclusion of an analysis by Université de Montréal researchers Frédérik Lavictoire and Simon Brassard, supervised by Normand Mousseau, a professor in the Department of Physics.
Their results are published in the journal Sustainable Futures.
Cars are getting heavier
Between 2011 and 2021, the average weight of vehicles sold in Quebec increased by 11 kg per year for over 10 years, from 1,566 kg to nearly 1,700 kg.
New vehicles weigh an average of 135 kg more than the existing fleet average, while vehicles that are being retired are 104 kg lighter. A vehicle purchased today weighs an average of 110 kg more than the one it replaces.
With 60,000 vehicles being added to Quebec’s fleet each year, the cost of maintaining the road network—and the electrical grid—is likely to be steep, the UdeM researchers say.
Small SUVs, which accounted for 12.6% of the fleet in 2011, have surged in popularity to reach 28.3% in 2021. They have been the leading category since 2020.
Meanwhile, compact vehicles declined from 28.5% to 25.4% of vehicles on the road, and sedans and minivans fell from 19.7% to 14.6%.
With their heavy batteries, EVs in Quebec now weigh about 23% more than gas-powered vehicles, or an extra 344 kg.
Heavier vehicles also take a toll in terms of premature wear and tear on the roads and more serious injuries in accidents. And as they continue to get heavier, they also put a strain on Quebec’s power grid.
Between 2021 and 2040, the UdeM researchers project that the amount of electricity used by EVs in the province will increase from 0.24 terawatt hours (TWh) to 29.03 TWh.
Harsh winters increase demand
EVs accounted for about 13.6% of Quebec’s total electricity demand in 2019. By 2030, when the government aims to have two million EVs on the roads, EV consumption would reach 7.68 TWh.
That’s roughly consistent with Hydro-Québec’s projection of 7.8 TWh for 2032.
However, Mousseau is concerned about the grid’s capacity in the province’s harsh winter months, when cold spells can be protracted and extreme.
EVs use more power in winter than in summer because cold temperatures reduce battery efficiency, increase tire friction and increase air density.
In January, when the average temperature is -10.3°C, monthly EV consumption will rise to 3.1 TWh once Quebec’s vehicle fleet is fully electrified, compared with 1.9 TWh in August, the UdeM researchers project.
At -20°C, the required capacity is almost double that on a summer day.
“In winter, we need to control electricity usage because adding capacity to meet peak demand costs $150 to $200 per kilowatt,” Mousseau said.
“With a fully electrified fleet in 2040, EVs would require an average additional capacity of 5,261 megawatts when the temperature is -20°C. That’s 12.1% of the total peak demand recorded in 2022.
“If the increasing weight of the EV fleet adds another gigawatt to peak demand, it will cost hundreds of millions of dollars more to generate that electricity.”
Three possible scenarios
The researchers modeled three scenarios for the period 2021-2040.
In the first, they allow the trend toward heavier vehicles to continue without intervention. In this case, the average mass would increase to 2,114 kg by 2040. The fleet’s annual electricity consumption would increase to 29.03 TWh and the additional required capacity on a cold winter’s day would be 5,261 megawatts.
In the second scenario, the increase in weight is limited to the weight of the EV battery: on average in Quebec, about 344 kg.
In the third scenario, the average vehicle weight is frozen at the 2021 level of 1,566 kg. This would reduce EV electricity demand by 17.6% in 2040, from 29.03 to 23.91 TWh. The required capacity on a -20°C day would drop from 5,261 to 4,332 megawatts.
The saving of almost 6 TWh is equivalent to three percent of Hydro-Québec’s current total production. It would avoid the need to build costly infrastructure that would be needed only for a few hours a year, during winter peaks.
In scenario 1, by 2035, EVs will require additional capacity of 3,232 megawatts when the temperature is -20°C. That is 40.4% of all the additional power projected in Hydro-Québec’s action plan by 2035.
“Electrification of the vehicle fleet will entail system costs that will have to be borne,” said Mousseau. “We believe that reducing the average weight of vehicles is one solution that should be explored.”
Regulations could make batteries lighter
How can the weight of EVs be reduced? The researchers suggest several possibilities.
One is to reduce the weight of the battery, a significant technological challenge but one they believe is achievable with technological progress.
“Between 2017-2018 and 2021-2022, batteries were improved to increase range, but unfortunately, this improvement also increased the weight of the vehicles,” Mousseau said.
The simplest solution would be to amend the existing “Act to increase the number of zero-emission motor vehicles in Québec,” he suggested.
“Manufacturers could be required to comply with a specific average weight, or to offset the additional weight by paying a fine or tax.”
This approach, which has proven effective in stimulating the production of EVs, could also be used to control their weight, Mousseau said.
“For example, Tesla has benefited from the credit transfers allowed by the Act, demonstrating that it is possible to have manufacturers, not consumers, bear the cost of design choices.”
‘Strong global pressure’
Although the Quebec government recently backtracked on banning the sale of gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035, Mousseau is confident about the future of electrification.
“There is strong global pressure: the electrification of road vehicles will happen,” he said.
By postponing electrification, “Quebec is temporarily burying its head in the sand, but it cannot indefinitely block access to more efficient and less expensive electric vehicles, such as those made in China.”
Mousseau also pointed to an important economic issue: “For 20 years, we have watched other countries develop green technologies. What will we be producing 20 years from now, if we keep letting others take the lead? If we don’t put our foot on the accelerator, there’ll be significant economic risks.”
More information:
												Frédérik Lavictoire et al, Impact of the car fleet evolution on electricity demand in Québec, Sustainable Futures (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.sftr.2025.101296
                                                Citation:
                                                Electric vehicles could strain Quebec’s power grid (2025, November 3)
                                                retrieved 3 November 2025
                                                from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-11-electric-vehicles-strain-quebec-power.html
                                            
                                            This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
                                            part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
                                            
Tech
Software developers show less constructive skepticism when using AI assistants than when working with human colleagues
														
When writing program code, software developers often work in pairs—a practice that reduces errors and encourages knowledge sharing. Increasingly, AI assistants are now being used for this role.
But this shift in working practice isn’t without its drawbacks, as a new empirical study by computer scientists in Saarbrücken reveals. Developers tend to scrutinize AI-generated code less critically and they learn less from it. These findings will be presented at the 40th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Automated Software Engineering (ASE 2025) in Seoul.
When two software developers collaborate on a programming project—known in technical circles as pair programming—it tends to yield a significant improvement in the quality of the resulting software.
“Developers can often inspire one another and help avoid problematic solutions. They can also share their expertise, thus ensuring that more people in their organization are familiar with the codebase,” explains Sven Apel, professor of computer science at Saarland University.
Together with his team, Apel has examined whether this collaborative approach works equally well when one of the partners is an AI assistant. In the study, 19 students with programming experience were divided into pairs: Six worked with a human partner, while seven collaborated with an AI assistant. The methodology for measuring knowledge transfer was developed by Niklas Schneider as part of his bachelor’s thesis.
For the study, the researchers used GitHub Copilot, an AI-powered coding assistant introduced by Microsoft in 2021, which—like similar products from other companies—has now been widely adopted by software developers. These tools have significantly changed how software is written.
“It enables faster development and the generation of large volumes of code in a short time. But this also makes it easier for mistakes to creep in unnoticed, with consequences that may only surface later on,” says Apel. The team wanted to understand which aspects of human collaboration enhance programming and whether these can be replicated in human-AI pairings. Participants were tasked with developing algorithms and integrating them into a shared project environment.
“Knowledge transfer is a key part of pair programming,” Apel explains. “Developers will continuously discuss current problems and work together to find solutions. This does not involve simply asking and answering questions, it also means that the developers share effective programming strategies and volunteer their own insights.”
According to the study, such exchanges also occurred in the AI-assisted teams—but the interactions were less intense and covered a narrower range of topics.
“In many cases, the focus was solely on the code,” says Apel. “By contrast, human programmers working together were more likely to digress and engage in broader discussions and were less focused on the immediate task.”
One finding particularly surprised the research team: “The programmers who were working with an AI assistant were more likely to accept AI-generated suggestions without critical evaluation. They assumed the code would work as intended,” says Apel. “The human pairs, in contrast, were much more likely to ask critical questions and were more inclined to carefully examine each other’s contributions.”
He believes this tendency to trust AI more readily than human colleagues may extend to other domains as well, stating, “I think it has to do with a certain degree of complacency—a tendency to assume the AI’s output is probably good enough, even though we know AI assistants can also make mistakes.
Apel warns that this uncritical reliance on AI could lead to the accumulation of “technical debt,” which can be thought of as the hidden costs of the future work needed to correct these mistakes, thereby complicating the future development of the software.
For Apel, the study highlights the fact that AI assistants are not yet capable of replicating the richness of human collaboration in software development.
“They are certainly useful for simple, repetitive tasks,” says Apel. “But for more complex problems, knowledge exchange is essential—and that currently works best between humans, possibly with AI assistants as supporting tools.”
Apel emphasizes the need for further research into how humans and AI can collaborate effectively while still retaining the kind of critical eye that characterizes human collaboration.
More information:
												Abstract: An Empirical Study of Knowledge Transfer in AI Pair Programming (2025).
                                                Citation:
                                                Software developers show less constructive skepticism when using AI assistants than when working with human colleagues (2025, November 3)
                                                retrieved 3 November 2025
                                                from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-11-software-skepticism-ai-human-colleagues.html
                                            
                                            This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
                                            part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
                                            
Tech
Fermented fibers could tackle both world hunger and fashion waste
														
A fermentation byproduct might help to solve two major global challenges: world hunger and the environmental impact of fast fashion. The leftover yeast from brewing beer, wine or even to make some pharmaceuticals can be repurposed to produce high-performance fibers stronger than natural fibers with significantly less environmental impact, according to a new study led by researchers at Penn State and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The yeast biomass—composed of proteins, fatty molecules called lipids and sugars—left over from alcohol and pharmaceutical production is regarded as waste, but lead author Melik Demirel, Pearce Professor of Engineering and Huck Chair in Biomimetic Materials at Penn State, said his team realized they could repurpose the material to make fibers using a previously developed process.
The researchers successfully achieved pilot-scale production of the fiber—producing more than 1,000 pounds—in a factory in Germany, with continuous and batch production for more than 100 hours per run of fiber spinning.
They also used data collected during this production for a lifecycle assessment, which assessed the needs and impact of the product from obtaining the raw fermentation byproduct through its life to disposal and its cost, and to evaluate the economic viability of the technology. The analysis predicted the cost, water use, production output, greenhouse gas emissions and more at every stage.
Ultimately, the researchers found that the commercial-scale production of the fermentation-based fiber could compete with wool and other fibers at scale but with considerably fewer resources, including far less land—even when accounting for the land needed to grow the crops used in the fermentation processes that eventually produce the yeast biomass.
“Just as hunter-gatherers domesticated sheep for wool 11,000 years ago, we’re domesticating yeast for a fiber that could shift the agricultural lens to focus far more resources to food crops,” said Demirel, who is also affiliated with the Materials Research Institute and the Institute of Energy and the Environment, both at Penn State.
“We successfully demonstrated that this material can be made cheaply—for $6 or less per kilogram, which is about 2.2 pounds, compared to wool’s $10 to $12 per kilogram—with significantly less water and land but improved performance compared to any other natural or processed fibers, while also nearly eliminating greenhouse gas emissions. The saved resources could be applied elsewhere, like repurposing land to grow food crops.”
Waste not, want not
Demirel’s team has spent over a decade developing a process to produce a fiber from proteins. Inspired by nature, the fiber is durable and free of the chemicals other fibers can leave in the environment for years.
“We can pull the proteins as an aggregate—mimicking naturally occurring protein accumulations called amyloids—from the yeast, dissolve the resulting pulp in a solution, and push that through a device called a spinneret that uses tiny spigots to make continuous fibers,” Demirel said, explaining the fibers are then washed, dried and spun into yarn that can then be woven into fabric for clothes.
He also noted that the fibers are biodegradable, meaning they would break down after disposal, unlike the millions of tons of polyester clothing discarded every year that pollutes the planet.
“The key is the solution used to dissolve the pulp. This solvent is the same one used to produce Lyocell, the fiber derived from cellulose, or wood pulp. We can recover 99.6% of the solvent used to reuse it in future production cycles.”
The idea of using proteins to make fiber is not new, according to Demirel, who pointed to Lanital as an example. The material was developed in the 1930s from milk protein, but it fell out of fashion due to low strength with the advent of polyester.
“The issue has always been performance and cost,” Demirel said, noting the mid-20th century also saw the invention of fibers made from peanut proteins and from corn proteins before cheap and stronger polyester ultimately reigned.

Freeing land from fiber to produce food
Beyond producing a quality fiber, Demirel said, the study also indicated the fiber’s potential on a commercial scale. The models rolled their pilot-scale findings into simulated scenarios of commercial production. For comparison, about 55,000 pounds of cotton are produced globally every year and just 2.2 pounds—about what it takes to make one T-shirt and one pair of jeans—requires up to 2,642 gallons of water. Raw cotton is relatively cheap, Demirel said, but the environmental cost is staggering.
“Cotton crops also use about 88 million acres, of farmable land around the world—just under 40% of that is in India, which ranks as ‘serious’ on the Global Hunger Index,” Demirel said.
“Imagine if instead of growing cotton, that land, water, resources and energy could be used to produce crops that could feed people. It’s not quite as simple as that, but this analysis demonstrated that biomanufactured fibers require significantly less land, water and other resources to produce, so it’s feasible to picture how shifting from crop-based fibers could free up a significant amount of land for food production.”
In 2024, 733 million people—about one in 12—around the world faced food insecurity, a continued trend that has led the United Nations to declare a goal of Zero Hunger to eliminate this issue by 2030. One potential solution may be to free land currently used to grow fiber crops to produce more food crops, according to Demirel.
Current production methods not only use significant resources, he said, but more than 66% of clothing produced annually in the U.S. alone ends up in landfills. Demirel’s approach offers a solution for both problems, he said.
“By leveraging biomanufacturing, we can produce sustainable, high-performance fibers that do not compete with food crops for land, water or nutrients,” Demirel said. “Adopting biomanufacturing-based protein fibers would mark a significant advancement towards a future where fiber needs are fulfilled without compromising the planet’s capacity to nourish its growing population. We can make significant strides towards achieving the Zero Hunger goal, ensuring everyone can access nutritious food while promoting sustainable development goals.”
Future of fiber
Demirel said the team plans to further investigate the viability of fermentation-based fibers at a commercial scale.
The team includes Benjamin Allen, chief technology officer, and Balijit Ghotra, Tandem Repeat Technologies, Inc., the spin-off company founded by Demirel and Allen based on this fiber production approach. The work has a patent pending, and the Penn State Office of Technology Transfer licensed the technology to Tandem Repeat Technologies. Other co-authors include Birgit Kosan, Philipp Köhler, Marcus Krieg, Christoph Kindler and Michael Sturm, all with the Thüringisches Institut für Textil- und Kunststoff-Forschung (TITK) e. V. in Germany.
“In my lab at Penn State, we demonstrated we could physically make the fiber,” Demirel said. “In this pilot production at the factory, together with Tandem and TITK, we demonstrated we could make the fiber a contender in the global fiber market. Sonachic, an online brand formed by Tandem Repeat, makes this a reality. Next, we will bring it to mass market.”
More information:
												Impact of biomanufacturing protein fibers on achieving sustainable development, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2508931122
                                                Citation:
                                                Fermented fibers could tackle both world hunger and fashion waste (2025, November 3)
                                                retrieved 3 November 2025
                                                from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-10-fermented-fibers-tackle-world-hunger.html
                                            
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