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Gallery: CARDBOARD ECO-COFFINS BIG IN ...

 

With limited burial space available, Hong Kong officials have begun heavily promoting eco-coffins made of corrugated cardboard. Available in Japan and across Europe, eco-coffins save time and energy, and considerably reducing toxic gas emissions during the cremation process. As Carrie Yau, Hong Kong’s Permanent Secretary for Health, Welfare & Food stated, “The eco-coffin coincides with the Asian philosophy of integration between man and nature. We will further study the material and design of the coffin and promote the application of the eco-coffin in Hong Kong to bring out the concept of paying tribute to the deceased through protecting the environment.”

Australian maker LifeArt offers a range of designs including the option to personalize and even customize your own design. Eco Coffins Ltd of Cambridge, England, offer a number of beautiful designs—all of which are 100% biodegradable and made from 90% recycled materials. + Eco Coffins

17 Responses to “CARDBOARD ECO-COFFINS BIG IN HONG KONG”

  1. jorg jorg says:

    Excellent idea.

    Now if we can add some CORPORATE logos to it, we’ll have a real commercial winner.

  2. Ramsey Ramsey says:

    Brilliant. Better that than to fill a cemetery for a few hundred years. I want them to fertilize an apple tree with me.

  3. Brian Jewett Brian Jewett says:

    Wow! That maple leaf coffin has given me a great idea for a parade float at our towns anual Fall Foliage Parade. “Global warming and the death of maple sugaring in New England”! Ooohh the mayor’s not gonna like this one! ;-)

  4. turtlebella turtlebella says:

    Great idea…just recently learned about all the environmental problems associated with funerals (I didn’t know that people are routinely embalmed even before cremation! How weird is that). Anyway- these coffins are quite beautiful! I kind of want one as a decorative piece in my house but that’s a bit morbid, huh?

    I think your idea for a parade float, Brian, is BRILLIANT.

  5. nick nick says:

    the eco design is great…the artistic design is less than par

  6. Nick Simpson Nick Simpson says:

    Apparently the idea of you surviving for decades in a coffin made of wood is rubbish – most rot down pretty quickly unless it’s lead lined or something along those lines. How lovely…

  7. jessie jessie says:

    i think i want to be put in a hole out in the woods when i die, so the worms can eat me.

  8. Julie Julie says:

    My father,72 years, has always said he’d like to burried in the traditional pine box….sometimes hard to find.Burial furnishings have become too lavish and, for someone who has lived his life simply, over ubundant.I’m sure this will suit him and me…a real back to the earth from whence we came. Go one step further…produce the from recycled products …hmmm

  9. I agree with Nick, the creative is not impressive. I check on the UK site and they can do a custom design. It cost $3500 CAD to get one with the picture you want. I think it is too much money for a cardboard coffin. Their regular creative models, shown above, cost about $1100 CAD, which is cheap for a coffin. Personally, I want to be buried in a cool design urn.

  10. andrew k from az andrew k from az says:

    I wanna know whether or not these things are legal in the US. If they are, I say who cares about the design, it’s going to be buried anyway.

  11. Kim Kim says:

    Love the cardboard idea for those who want to be buried. Me, I’m donating my body to research/hospital/organ donations, they can burn what’;s left, I won’t be needing it.

    People forget about skin donations– our largest organ and there is always a shortage in burn units –sometimes they have to do two grafts, first out of pigskin (really) until they can find enough skin donors. The burn victims have already been through enoug without needing extra surgeries, consider becoming an organ donor and you’ll really be recycling!

  12. sophie in az sophie in az says:

    I completely agree with Kim about donating your body, although I don’t want my body to end up in “bodyworlds” or anything related to organ traffiking…how does one avoid that? Hopefully everyone signs their organ donor card!

    I also think these coffins are amazing, I’ve always told my parents to just chuck me in the compost bin, but if these were re-used cardboard pieces, then i’d be keen on having my leftover bits put in there and burried. But why would you need the design, how eco is it to use paint a coffin? Au naturel would be the way for me to ‘go’.

  13. Jan Willem Jan Willem says:

    The big (or small) question is what does it cost? At $10-$15 dollars it’s worth it. At $1100 CAD what are people thinking? Cardboard also does not retain body fluids properly, especially when in use for a week. There are two solutions, fill a body with toxic embalming fluid. Or seal the coffin with a plastic inner coffin. Currently I am studying nutrient flows of all toxic fluids and it seems as if it is better to hold the body fluids until the body is fully decomposed. Otherwise local ground water can be harmed. This is only an issue with larger densely populated cemeteries.

  14. Julio Ceballos Julio Ceballos says:

    IMPORTANT: WE PRODUCE ANY TIPE OF CARDBOARD COFFIN YOU WANT O NEED, THE PRICE IS ABOUT U$ 1000. CONTACT ME AT atdeca@gmail.com.

    REGARDS
    JULIO.

  15. Gregg Koefer Gregg Koefer says:

    Soon, they will be available at COSTCO for about $199.00, Again, stripping all of the profit margin out of yet another category,..

  16. kboy kboy says:

    Try looking at http://www.ColourfulCoffins.com they do designs to suit you individually.Cheaper too

  17. Humberto Humberto says:

    This is extraordinary

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