Renesa Architects Studio / Shai Epstein photography
Arora's new take on crematoriums was inspired by the death of the architect's grandmother. He felt that public crematorium spaces were disorganized and neglected and added to people's distress.
Nikolaus Hirsch / Michel Müller
The Museum of Immortality was built for Design Week Mexico 2016. Its architects -- Nikolaus Hirsch and Michel Müller -- were inspired by 19th century Russian philosopher Nikolai Fedorov, who proposed the notion of humans achieving immortality through science.
Nikolaus Hirsch / Michel Müller
Standing over 26 feet tall, the pavilion features 15 layers of large acrylic boxes, each of which varies in opacity. Hirsch and Müller created a circular design that resembles a spaceship, drawing attention upwards towards the heavens.
Renesa Architects Studio
Architect Sanchit Arora, of Renesa Architecture Design Interiors Studio, wanted to align crematorium spaces with the Hindu concept of celebrating death. His proposal incorporates nature, light, shadow and water to create a more soothing experience for mourners.
BNKR Arquitectura / Esteban Suárez photographer
Tucked away in a forest in Acapulco, Mexico, Sunset Chapel is a two-part project. BNKR Arquitectura set out to design a space with a wedding chapel and a mausoleum next door.
Ron Shenkin Studio / photographer Shai Epstein
This geometric structure, designed by Ron Shenkin Studio for Architecture and Design, is located in Pardesia, Israel. It was built as a place for mourners to converge, read eulogies and share memories prior to burial at the the neighboring cemetery.
Ron Shenkin Studio / photographer Shai Epstein
Made of 300 stone panels, the pavilion roof is held up by tree-shaped metal pillars. The architects also built a line of concrete that ascends from one side of the pavilion and returns to the ground on the other to symbolize man's return to dust,
Salas Arquitectura + Diseños / Diaporama photos
This morgue, designed by Salas Arquitectura + Diseños, aims to connect mourners with the afterlife through the use of natural light, raw materials and intimate corners.
Salas Arquitectura + Diseños / Diaporama photos
The concrete building features windows that cast shadows across the room, which move as the day goes on to symbolize the passage of time.
AE Arquitectos/Santos-Diez/BIS Images
AE Arquitectos designed this funeral home to enable family members to bid farewell to the deceased in a quiet, serene location. To bring a sense of life to the premises, the building features intimate courtyards and a green rooftop.

Story highlights

Most buildings for the dead are cold, depressing, utilitarian concrete boxes

But architects around the world are now rethinking how they design for the dead

CNN  — 

Crematoriums, morgues, funeral homes. These buildings, all of which are involved in rituals around death, often look as mournful as they sound. Designed to be discreet, they are usually cold and depressing utilitarian concrete boxes, tucked far away from the land of the living.

But architects around the world have begun to embrace death, designing symbolic structures that exude beauty, peace and a sense of intrigue.

“Crematoriums and morgues, including modern architecture, have always been challenging topics for architects,” says German designer Nikolaus Hirsch, who recent helped design a museum for the dead.

“But architecture can build a bridge between the living and the dead and, to some extent, blur the boundaries.”

From a Museum of Immortality in Mexico to a poetic morgue in Spain, designers are on a mission to inject more life into architecture for the dead.

Immortality by design

It was the connection between the living and the dead that inspired Hirsh’s thinking behind the “Museum of Immortality.”

Commissioned by Design Week Mexico and the Museo Tamayo for their October 2016 exhibition, the conceptual pavilion aims to stretch the field of design beyond tangible objects.

Bread Studios
Local architecture firm Bread Studios designed an eternally floating cemetery as a solution to the over-crowded graveyards of Hong Kong.
Bread Studios
A futuristic idea, Floating Eternity takes burials to the open sea. The offshore cemetery aims to ease pressure on Hong Kong's columbariums and grave yards.
Chris McGrath/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
The Ruriden, operated by the Koukokuji buddhist temple, took two years to build and houses 2,046 futuristic alters with glass Buddha statues that correspond to drawers storing the ashes of the deceased.
Chris McGrath/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Passersby would never guess what's inside this traditional looking temple. The Ruriden is just one example of columbariums in Asia embracing a more forward-thinking approach to burials.
Chris McGrath/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
An electronic card allows the owner of the alter to access the Ruriden. To make it easier to find a loved one's remains, a corresponding Buddha lights up when visitors swipe in.
Chris McGrath/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
A glass Buddha alter lights up inside the Ruriden columbarium in Tokyo, Japan.
Chris McGrath/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Ashes are stored for 33 years before being buried below the Ruriden. Currently 600 alters are in use and another 300 are reserved.
Bread Studios
The burial cruise will sail around the back of Hong Kong island on normal days, docking at major Hong Kong harbors during the Chung Yeung Festival and Ching Ming festivals, cultural holidays for commemorating their ancestors.
Guang Niu/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
A city well-known for its aging population and land scarcity, Hong Kong burial cites can be over-crowded.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
In 50 years' time, the number of deaths per year will have almost doubled in the city, according to the Hong Kong Census and Statistics Department.
Hidetaka Sato/CNN
Tokyo -- Shinjuku Rurikoin Byakurengedo columbarium takes a high-tech approach to death with a smart automatic storage system, enabling the building to house tens of thousands of ash urns.

Hirsch, who created the museum with his colleague Michel Müller from Studio MC, described it as an abstract attempt to offer immortality to humans, much like a museum’s approach to objects.

“It’s inspired by a two-fold conversation: the preservation of objects in a museum and the preservation of humans in mausoleums,” he says.

The concept pays homage to 19th century Russian philosopher Nikolai Fedorov and his notion of the ‘Common Task’ – a philosophy that explores resurrecting the dead through science and technology.

Indeed, Hirsch and Müller’s abstract interpretation brings to mind other-wordly pursuits. The 26 foot tall, hexagonal pavilion resembles a cross between a spaceship and a crypt, and was built using 15 layers of stacked acrylic boxes – some transparent and some opaque.

Nikolaus Hirsch / Michel Müller
The Museum of Immortality, Mexico.

Each box is roughly the size of a human: about 5 feet, 11 inches long and just under 2 feet wide.

The futuristic appearance is also a nod to Kazakhstan’s Baikonur Cosmodrome, the world’s largest operational space launch facility, while the curving shape takes inspiration from the country’s geometric mausoleums.

Currently located in the Parque Bosque de Chapultepec outside the Museo Tamayo, in Mexico City, the free-standing structure will be on display until spring of 2017.

New ideas in New Delhi

Mexico isn’t the only place where architecture is rethinking death.

In New Delhi, 24-year-old Sanchit Arora, of Renesa Architecture Design Interiors Studio, has proposed a new approach to traditionally gloomy crematoriums.

Following in-depth research, that included his own grieving process, Arora found that the city’s public crematorium facilities are often poorly managed, run-down and located in dilapidated industrial areas.

Now in discussion with the New Delhi government, Arora is pushing for a more welcoming and nature-inspired crematorium zone in a South Delhi park that would alter the mourning experience completely.

“When my grandmother passed away, we saw the sad situation of crematoriums in New Delhi. They are left dirty and uncared for, and it’s just a sad state of affairs,” he says. “It just adds to your psychological distress during an already upsetting time.”

As cremation is a key part of a Hindu funeral, Arora set out to design a systematic yet approachable space that aims to soothe the living while they mourn the dead.

“What we saw through the process of my grandmother’s death is that, in the end, it’s not about the body. It’s about the people who are coming to mourn,” says Arora.

“When people die of old age in India, it is supposed to be a celebration. But there is a disconnect between the space and the celebration.”

Renesa Architects Studio / Shai Epstein photography
The proposed Green Park Crematorium Extension in New Delhi, India.

With exposed concrete, warm woods, and lush greenery all around, Arora’s design creates a minimalistic, zen vibe. There are quiet nooks and peaceful water features – all connected to a spacious park.

In Hindu culture, a funeral consists of several parts – it begins by viewing the deceased at home and is followed by bathing the body to purify sins. The body is then moved onto a wooden funeral pyre to be cremated.

Arora’s design not only introduces more environmentally-friendly electric cremation, it also streamlines each step of the process, with a logical path through the premises that offers organization and intimacy during the funeral process.

“Death is always going to be death,” says Arora. “But the translation of those spaces in terms of architecture and design changes from culture to culture.’

Peaceful passing in Spain

Across the other side of the world, on the outskirts of Zaragoza in Spain’s northeastern Aragon region, Tanatorium looks more like a spa than a morgue.

Designed by Juan Carlos Salas, the award-winning building has a sculptural appearance and every detail carries meaning.

“We tried to find the soul of the space,” explains Salas. “The plan of the building symbolizes a cavern. Visitors contemplate the deceased and explore their inner lives at the same time.”

Salas Arquitectura + Diseños / Diaporama photos
The Tanatorium, Spain.

Using a stereotomic architecture technique of cutting stones to form a perforated envelope, Salas created a cavernous atmosphere that’s meant to offer a sense of protection.

The 2,110-square-foot structure includes a diagonal roof, facing the sun as if to salute the heavens. It’s also a functional way to inject light into the rooms below.

Salas even visualized how light moved throughout the building – the roof’s slanted shape creates a shadow that shifts during the day, symbolizing the passing of time.

A peaceful and remote atmosphere evokes intimate feelings that Salas hopes will help mourners during a difficult time in their lives.

“Architecture won’t help deceased people, but it helps to keep their memories alive among the living,” he says. “The quality and symbolism of buildings like crematoriums and morgues are getting better every day.”