A scheme for suggesting a way that natural burial sites could be built in cities by Manchester Academics has been shortlisted for a national competition.

Academics from Manchester Metropolitan University have suggested the idea could give residents and visitors more green space, help improve air quality and the environment and respond to a shortage of burial spaces.

The scheme suggests that rather than a headstone, relatives would select a tree or a bird box as memorialisation. A GPS tagging system would enable their loved one’s body to be clearly located on site, so that memorialisation could continue as a personal ceremonial act.

Ian Fisher, a senior lecturer in landscape architecture at the Manchester School of Architecture, and Ann Sharrock, a freelance landscape architect, who studied for the Bachelor of Landscape Architecture at MMU suggested that people could be buried in a network of urban woodlands, which would be an integral part of urban green infrastructure.

Tree species would be selected for their tolerance of urban conditions, absorbing gaseous and other particulate pollution, as well as contributing to increasing urban humidity, providing shelter, reducing peak run off flows, increasing biodiversity and improving the mental health and wellbeing of residents and visitors.

Ian said: “Over the next 20 years half the country’s burial sites will be full up, and a quarter of towns who replied to a survey said they would run out of space within 10 years. It is a serious problem as is the problem of poor air quality, enhanced heat islands in cities, recycling rainwater and other environmental issues. We asked, how can we put these together?”
Ian and Ann put the idea forward at an Urban Forestry Conference, in Estonia, and are following it up with an article in The Journal of the Landscape Institute.

While the burial service would be a non-secular ceremony, the space subsequent to this act would provide a secular surface, a place of tranquillity, escape, contemplation and community focus.

The absence of formal reminders of the paraphernalia associated with death, might help address people’s hesitancy to enter cemeteries as well as reduce the burden of expensive caskets and headstones for those who least can afford it.

Ian added that “through their association, these spaces would generate respect and responsibility, as well as encourage a greater social acceptance of death. This would bring death into daily life, which is one of the last great taboos, and go a long way towards demystifying it,”he environment and respond to a shortage of burial spaces.

The plan is one of eight shortlisted by the Landscape Institute for their “liveable cities” competition, the winner of which will be voted for by the public at the Healthy Landscapes Symposium at London’s Garden Museum next week.

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