InventWood’s Superwood represents a breakthrough material that transforms ordinary wood into a substance stronger than steel through molecular restructuring and densification[1]. The company is launching a 90,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Frederick, Maryland in Q3 2025 to begin commercial production[2].
Key features of Superwood:
- 50% more tensile strength than steel with 10x better strength-to-weight ratio[3]
- Fire-resistant, rot-resistant, and pest-resistant while maintaining wood’s natural appearance[2:1]
- Created through a two-step process involving chemical treatment and hot-pressing[4]
- Can be produced in hours rather than weeks using “food industry” chemicals[3:1]
Environmental Impact:
- Could replace up to 80% of global steel and concrete use[5]
- Potential to reduce carbon emissions by 37.2 gigatons over 30 years[5:1]
- Trees act as carbon stores: steel produces 1.85 kg CO2 per kilogram, while wood removes 1.8 kg CO2[5:2]
Business Development:
- Secured $15 million in Series A funding in 2025[2:2]
- Total capital raised exceeds $50 million[2:3]
- Formed partnership with Intectural for North American distribution[2:4]
- Initial products will focus on building facades before expanding to structural applications[3:2]



How do you join or cut these pieces of wood if they are harder than steel? Can’t drive ordinary nails or screws or saws through steel.
There would also be the possibility of forming the wood into a workable shape beforehand. IIRC it doesn’t shrink that much, just compresses, so it’s possible to have holes and angles where you need them; joinerery would be an issue though.
I think that to work with it isn’t so different as working with metal or even wood. Even if it is harder than normal steel, it won’t be a problem to drill, or cut it-
https://www.youtube.com/embed/7gn0qnR6gOM