When window shopping in a city, it’s often an aesthetic storefront that captures your attention and pulls you inside.
But what if the handcrafted vase that caught your eye was actually an urn for human remains?
That’s the business model for the crop of trendy, modernized mortuaries popping up around the world, per The New York Times.
Pretty enough to be spas or nightclubs, these new mortuaries bring some levity to customers looking for something different. In a Co-Op Funeralcare study of 4k people in the UK, 68% said they see funerals as celebrations of life, not sad occasions.
These new mortuary models are tapping into a lucrative industry: The average funeral costs ~$6.6k in London, while the median cost of a US funeral is $8.3k.
It’s not just funeral homes — death is having a moment…
… largely thanks to increased acceptance from younger consumers. Most (68%) or Gen Zers strongly agree that it’s important to hold a funeral or memorial service for a loved one, compared to 44% of baby boomers.
This has fueled the $126B death tech industry and an ever-growing group of startups innovating new solutions:
And, of course, there are companies trying to put this whole industry out of business by nixing death altogether.
Tomorrow Biostasis and Cradle Healthcare Co. are chipping away at cryogenic tech to wake the dead.