but it happens,
we die, and if our choice is to be berried, here is an alternative to traditional wood and velvet-lined caskets, photographs ©
Bob Hendrikx,
they can take more than a decade to
decompose in the earth, a new design by Bob Hendrikx is an
environmentally friendly alternative that replenishes the soil,
breaking
down in just two to three years,
known as “The Living Cocoon” is
composed entirely of mycelium, the thread-like part of the fungi that branches
out underground to provide food to the rest of the organism,
Mycelium is
“constantly looking for waste materials to convert into nutrients for the
environment…For example, mycelium was used in Chernobyl, is utilized in
Rotterdam to clean up soil, and some farmers also apply it to make the land
healthy again,” Hendrikx says,
and this is what Mycelium looks like close up, generated
without light, heat, or any sort of active energy source, the coffins are grown
in one week by mixing a strain of mycelium and a substrate together and placing
the combination in a mold. The fungi then absorbs the other substance and forms
the box-like shape. Research by two funeral cooperatives, CUVO and De Laatste Eer, already
shows that “The Living Cocoon” decomposes in soil within 30 to 45 days, and the
design was used in a burial in recent weeks. “We are currently living in
nature’s graveyard. Our behavior is not only parasitic, it’s also
short-sighted. We are degrading organisms into dead, polluting materials, but
what if we kept them alive?” Hendrikx says. To follow Hendrikx’s
environmentally conscious designs, head to Instagram and YouTube, a bit morbid but there it is, an interesting way to go for sure.
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