Browsing all posts tagged with coffins
Best Ecofriendly Coffins
I had read about people being cremated and adding their remains to coral reefs, but the other day, while perusing the Happy Hippie site, I noticed this tidbit on an eco-friendly company that sells many sustainable options if one is going to have a burial.
I realized that there are a few interesting biodegradable options when choosing a mode of interment:
-The Eco Pod (seen above) coffin lets you enter the ground in recycled paper.

The coffin table with it’s covers on to be utilized as a coffee table before death

Remove the top covers to store games, books and magazines, and eventually in which to place the body, which will biodegrade through the bottom slats, which the designer also said “mimics the human skeleton”
At Brooklyn Designs this year, one of the most innovative ideas was from Charles Constantine of the Pratt Insitute. This beautiful “coffin table” is meant to bring death into the center of family life (literally) by being used as a coffee table until such time that it is needed, so that it serves two functions. Charles said that in this way the family could become comfortable with death and be a part of the final resting place of the person who has passed.
-The Everybody Coffin is inexpensive and simple to assemble (?!) I am not sure who is going to want to build this after experiencing a loss, but maybe a family would get together to build it as an homage to the deceased. From personal experience, when my father died, I don’t think any of us would have been able to manage something like this, during such an intense time.
I like the idea of building it as a way to honor a loved one. You could incorporate flowers, botanicals, notes, letters, natural paints, and make it unique. Otherwise, if the family is too bereft, green funeral homes would assemble this for you. Since it doesn’t contain harmful chemicals such as formaldehyde, this could also be used for a cremation.
This wicker casket a nice option if one wants to go au natural and is planning on a ceremony. At first, we found it hilarious that you could go out in wicker! I have a “thing” about wicker, for some reason, so my hubby told me that if I get too cantankerous in my old age, I’m going out in one of these.
There are also biodegradable urns if you do go the cremation route.
And where to put that biodegradable coffin? Check out some of the natural burial grounds in the United States:
-Green Springs Natural Cemetery 93 acres in NY State
-Glendale Memorial Nature Preserve – 350 acres in Florida.
book, books, coffee, coffins, death, design, designer, ecofriendly, farm, Home, magazine, magazines, Outdoors, paper, recycle, recycled, spring, sustainableThe Big "Green" Sleep

A green woodland burial site in the UK where the ‘headstones’ are saplings
Today, there are many environmentally responsible decisions that one can make regarding the ‘eternal rest.’ Mortality is not the most popular topic at the water cooler, but talking green lightens things up. Why not choose a departure that honors not only an individual’s life, but the earth as well?
There are plenty of reasons why the typical rituals surrounding death are no longer ecologically viable. The ground in cemeteries is treated with fertilizer, herbicides, and other harmful chemicals. Cremation is greener than traditional embalming and burying, but environmental issues include burning of fossil fuels and the release of toxins from the body (mercury in fillings, dioxin, hydrochloric acid, etc.) It is a much less expensive option than burial and these days the high-temperature burners can help to destroy some of the toxins released by the body. For some (depending on one’s spiritual or religious leanings) cremation might not be an option.
During difficult times it can be hard to make a decision if one is not prepared.
The Green Burial Council is an organization that has been helping to set the standards in a growing field. From their website:
Since 2005, the Green Burial Council has been working to make burial sustainable for the planet, meaningful for the families, and economically viable for the provider. And in that short period of time, we’ve emerged as the “gold standard” among consumers, land trusts, park service agencies as well the cemetery/funeral profession.
* By developing a certification program that is bringing about a new ethic in deathcare rooted in transparency, accountability and ecological responsibility;
* By building out an international network of “approved providers” who are committed to reducing toxins, waste, and carbon emissions that have been associated with conventional end-of-life rituals; and
* By bringing conservation organizations together with cemetery operators, funeral establishments, and cremation companies to create burial programs that facilitate the restoration, acquisition and stewardship of natural areas.
The group has generated a large database providing lists of international providers who seek to minimize toxins, waste and carbon emissions. This site is an excellent resource for anyone curious about progressive end-of-life practices and rituals.
C.A. Beal has written a treatise on the natural burial movement and an excerpt of her book on the subject can be read here. Beal goes into thorough detail, documenting all things regarding dying green.
The Green Burial Council is standardizing the process of natural burials and land conservation. For more information on what this process involves click here.
When you think about it, choosing a green way to “go” could be one of the most environmentally important decisions you make. And once you include it in your will’s directives, you never have to think about it (or stress your family out when the inevitable happens) again. After all, none of us gets out of here alive!
















