Times Colonist

Mushroom coffins, urns offer sustainabl­e afterlife

- RAF CASERT and ALEKSANDAR FURTULA

DELFT, Netherland­s — For those seeking to live in the most sustainabl­e way, there now is an afterlife too.

A Dutch intrepid inventor is now “growing” coffins by putting mycelium, the root structure of mushrooms, together with hemp fibre in a special mould that, in a week, turns into what could basically be compared to an unpainted Egyptian sarcophagu­s.

And while traditiona­l wooden coffins come from trees that can take decades to grow and years to break down in the soil, the mushroom versions biodegrade­s and delivers the remains to nature in barely a month and a half.

In our 21st century, when the individual spirit can increasing­ly thrive way beyond the strictures of yore, death and funerals are all so often still hemmed in by tradition that may fall far short of the vision of the deceased or their loved ones.

“We all have different cultures and different ways of wanting to be buried in the world. But I do think there’s a lot of us, a huge percentage of us, that would like it differentl­y. And it’s been very old school the same way for 50 or 100 years,” said Shawn Harris, a U.S. investor in the Loop Biotech company that produces the coffins.

With climate consciousn­ess and a special care of nature a focal point in ever more lives, Loop Biotech says it has the answer for those wanting to live the full circle of life — and then some — as close to what they always believed in.

Bob Hendrikx, the 29-yearold founder bedecked in a “I am compost” T-shirt at a recent presentati­on, said that he had researched nature a great deal “especially mushrooms. And I learned that they are the biggest recyclers on the planet. So I thought, hey, why can we not be part of the cycle of life? And then decided to grow a mushroom-based coffin.” Moss can be draped within the coffins for the burial ceremonies.

And for those preferring cremation, there is also an urn they grow which can be buried with a sapling sticking out. So when the urn is broken down, the ashes can help give life to the tree.

“Instead of: ‘we die, we end up in the soil and that’s it,’ Now there is a new story : we can enrich life after death and you can continue to thrive as a new plant or tree,” Hendrikx said in an interview. “It brings a new narrative in which we can be part of something bigger than ourselves.”

The coffins cost 995 euros (more than $1,000) each, and the price for an urn is 196.80 euros ($212).

To put nature at the heart of such funerals, Loop Biotech is partnering with Natuurbegr­aven Nederland — Nature Burials Netherland­s — which uses six special habitats were remains can be embedded in protected parks.

Currently, Loop Biotech has a capacity to “grow” 500 coffins or urns a month, and are shipping across Europe. Hendrikx said they have caught on in the Nordics.

“It’s the Northern European countries where there is more consciousn­ess about the environmen­t and also where there’s autumn,” he said. “So they know and understand the mushroom, how it works, how it’s part of the ecosystem.”

 ?? AP ?? Director Lonneke Westhoff, right, and founder Bob Hendrikx, left, of Loop Biotech display one of their coffins grown from local mushrooms and upcycled hemp fibres, in Delft, Netherland­s.
AP Director Lonneke Westhoff, right, and founder Bob Hendrikx, left, of Loop Biotech display one of their coffins grown from local mushrooms and upcycled hemp fibres, in Delft, Netherland­s.
 ?? AP ?? Urns made of mushrooms and hemp fibre can be buried with a sapling sticking out so the ashes help give life to the tree.
AP Urns made of mushrooms and hemp fibre can be buried with a sapling sticking out so the ashes help give life to the tree.

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