DH Latest NewsDH NEWSLatest NewsNEWSInternationalLife Style

‘living Coffins’ ; Student makes coffin that gets ‘absorbed by nature !!!

Netherlands ; Delft University of Technology student  has developed a living coffin made from mycelium. The Living Cocoon aids the body to compost more efficiently, removes toxic substances and produces richer conditions in which to grow new trees and plants. The first of the initial limited batch of ten Living Cocoons was already used for a funeral last week.Practical tests conducted by Ecovative in America have shown that the coffin is actually absorbed by nature within 30 to 45 days, under normal Dutch conditions.

Mycelium normally grows underground in the complex root structure of trees, plants and fungi. It is a living organism that can neutralize all kinds of toxic substances and provides nutrition to everything that grows above the ground. Bob Hendrikx, who founded Loop, calls mycelium nature’s recycler: “It’s constantly looking for waste materials to convert into nutrients for the environment. It does the same with toxic substances, including oil, plastic and metal. 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.”

“The Living Cocoon enables people to become one with nature again and to enrich the soil, instead of polluting it,” says Hendrikx. The speed at which a body composts generally depends on various conditions, but experience shows that it can take over a decade. The varnished and metal parts of a coffin, as well as synthetic clothing, can persist for even longer. Loop expects that their coffin will be able to complete this entire process in two to three years, because it actively contributes to the composting process. In that process, not only are the waste products from the human body converted into nutrients, the quality of the surrounding soil is also improved, giving new life an opportunity to thrive.

In order to quantify the positive impact on soil quality, Loop is set to join forces with researchers from Naturalis to conduct further research into the increase in biodiversity that this form of burial can help to achieve.While completing his degree in the Material Lab at Industrial Design Engineering, Bob Hendrikx (Loop’s founder) developed his vision for using living materials. “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? Just imagine: a house that can breathe and a T-shirt that grows with you.”

An example of a potential future design of the Loop Living Cocoon will be on display at the (Re)Design Death exhibition in the Cube Design Museum in Kerkrade (The Netherlands) from 21 September. Visitors will have the opportunity to feed the living coffin, contributing to the growth of the woods that surround it. The exhibition is devoted to the theme of saying goodbye, dying, mourning and remembrance and can be seen until 24 January 2021.

shortlink

Post Your Comments


Back to top button