National Post

DIY kit allows people to build their own coffin

- Al ison Au ld

FREDERIC TON• It has been called the Ikea of the coffin world: A ready- to- assemble casket kit.

New Brunswick woodworker Jeremy Burrill has been selling simple pine caskets locally for about two years, aiming to give people an affordable and more environmen­tally friendly option for their send-offs.

But when the owner of Fredericto­n’s Fiddlehead Casket Co. decided to expand his business beyond the local market, he found shipping the coffins to be expensive because of their heft and size.

So, the entreprene­ur came up with an unconventi­onal solution — a “stripped-down,” do-it-yourself casket kit that could be easily assembled and shipped anywhere a delivery truck can travel.

Hence, the comparison­s to the Scandinavi­an chain known for its ready- to- assemble furniture.

“It is like that, but there are no Allen keys to fuss with,” Burrill said with a chuckle. “The response has been generally positive, but there have been a few people who have put their eyebrows up and been like, ‘ What? A kit for a casket? I’d never do that.’

“It’s just totally not their thing, but a lot of people say, ‘Oh that’s what I want — just give me something simple and don’t make a big fuss about it.’ ”

Burrill came up with the kit idea after he started getting inquiries for his rudimentar­y caskets from people in the U. S., B. C., and other parts of Canada.

He discovered the cost of shipping the plain boxes would be about $ 1 , 000 — roughly the same cost of his already assembled coffins.

He fiddled with the design of his assembled casket and came up with one that could be put together on the receiver’s end in about a half an hour, though he says he can do it in 10 minutes or less. He’s been marketing the $700 kit for about two weeks, and has already had orders from B.C. and Ontario.

Burrill said he also wanted to expand the reach of his business, since funeral directors were constraine­d by contracts that didn’ t easily allow them to buy caskets from anyone other than two big suppliers.

“There were a lot of barriers and a lot of them just didn’ t get it and would say, ‘ Why would anyone want that, why wouldn’t t hey want one of t hese fancy hardwood ones like I have?’ ” he said, adding that a convention­al casket can start at around $2,000.

The 35- year- old woodworker says the biodegrada­ble, all- wood kits include 10 pine panels and 38 cherry pins for joinery. His assembled caskets include cotton cushioning filled with wood shavings to minimize waste and were inspired by a relative looking for a simpler coffin.

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