Los Angeles Times

The fungi future is here — at an urban mushroom farm just south of downtown L.A.

Yellow oyster is one several varieties grown at Smallhold Mushrooms. The company is an urban mushroom farm in a warehouse in Vernon. Photographed on Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022, in Vernon, California.

LOS ANGELES — A mushroom revolution is taking place on the grocery store shelves of Southern California: In the produce sections of markets across Los Angeles, Agaricus bisporus, commonly known as the white button mushroom, is giving way to other dazzling fungi species such as blue oyster, lion's mane, maitake and royal trumpet.

Many of them likely are cultivated in a sprawling warehouse in the middle of Vernon — the industrial city just south of downtown L.A. — the location of an urban mushroom farm that New York-based company Smallhold opened five months ago.

In a 34,000-square-foot building, on the same street as a producer of ready-mix concrete and a Dr Pepper distributor, Smallhold grows mushrooms of fantastical display and scale — several thousand pounds of mushrooms a week, or tens of thousands of pounds in the near future, if all goes as planned.

"We have the capacity to harvest more than 20,000 pounds a week," said co-founder

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