Santa Fe New Mexican

Crowded Japan offers hotels for corpses

Growing market gives an alternativ­e to costly traditiona­l funerals

- By Motoko Rich

OSAKA, Japan — The minimalist rooms at the Hotel Relation here in Japan’s third-largest city are furnished with plain twin beds. Flat-screen television­s adorn the walls. Plasticwra­pped cups and toothbrush­es are provided in the bathrooms. And just across the hall are the rooms where the corpses rest.

Checkout time, for the living and the dead, is usually no later than 3 p.m.

The Hotel Relation is what Japanese call an itai hoteru ,or corpse hotel. About half the rooms are fitted with small altars and narrow platforms designed to hold coffins. Some also have climate-controlled coffins with transparen­t lids so mourners can peer inside.

Part mortuary, part inn, these hotels serve a growing market of Japanese seeking an alternativ­e to a big, traditiona­l funeral in a country where the population is aging rapidly, community bonds are fraying and crematorie­s are struggling to keep up with the sheer number of people dying.

By custom, Japanese families take the bodies of their loved ones home from the hospital and sit for an overnight wake followed by a service the next morning in the company of neighbors, colleagues and friends. Then, in the afternoon, the body is sent to a crematory.

But as neighborho­od ties have weakened, funerals that once involved entire communitie­s are increasing­ly the province of small, nuclear families. At the same time, Japanese society is getting old so fast and deaths per year are climbing so quickly that families sometimes have to wait several days before a body can be cremated.

The corpse hotels offer a practical solution — a place where a body can be stored at low cost until the crematory is ready, and where small, inexpensiv­e wakes and services can be held outside the home.

“We can say the supply doesn’t meet the demand,” mainly in urban areas, said Hiroshi Ota, an official at the Japan Society of Environmen­tal Crematorie­s. While Japan has an estimated 5,100 crematorie­s, Tokyo, with a population of more than 13 million, has just 26.

“The demand for cremation will increase until the baby boomers disappear,” Ota said.

Japan has funeral parlors, too, an industry that developed as people moved from the countrysid­e to the cities and it became difficult — and often impossible — to take corpses into highrises. But they cater to larger groups and more elaborate ceremonies, and these days, that can seem a bit much.

When Hajime Iguchi died at age 83 last autumn, his sister and brother-in-law held his wake and funeral at Sousou, a corpse hotel in the Tokyo suburb of Kawasaki City. Iguchi, a lifelong bachelor, had died in a nursing home after a protracted illness.

“Back in the day, we used to have funerals at home, but times have changed,” said his sister, Kunie Abe, 73. “Neighbors all used to know each other and would help one another out. But today, you don’t even know your next-door neighbor.”

The demand for itai hoteru is likely to grow. Last year, 1.3 million people died in Japan, up 35 percent from 15 years earlier, and the annual toll is expected to climb until it peaks at 1.7 million in 2040, according to the Ministry of Labor, Health and Welfare.

About 37 percent of Japanese women who died last year were over 90, with few surviving friends to mourn them. And close to one-fifth of Japanese men never marry or father children, leaving behind few relatives to plan or attend funerals.

The number of people dying alone is also on the rise. In Tokyo, for example, the number of people over 65 who died alone at home more than doubled between 2003 and 2015, the latest year for which government figures are available.

At the Hotel Relation in Osaka, about a third of the customers forgo a formal funeral. Instead, they sit in the rooms with their dearly departed for a day or two, with only close family in attendance, and then send the bodies for cremation.

“In the past, if you heard someone held a funeral just for family members, people in the neighborho­od would say, ‘What kind of people would hold a family-only funeral?’ But now it is accepted,” said Yoshihiro Kurisu, the hotel’s president.

Corpse hotels are more economical than large funeral homes. According to the Japan Consumer Associatio­n, the average funeral in Japan runs 1.95 million yen, or about $17,690. The cheapest package at the Hotel Relation costs 185,000 yen, or about $1,768.

 ?? BEN C. SOLOMON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Relatives of Hajime Iguchi depart Sousou, a so-called corpse hotel, en route to a crematory in Kawasaki City, Japan, in Septemper.
BEN C. SOLOMON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Relatives of Hajime Iguchi depart Sousou, a so-called corpse hotel, en route to a crematory in Kawasaki City, Japan, in Septemper.

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