When I die recompose me Katrina Spade

My name is Katrina Spade,
and I grew up in a medical family

where it was fairly normal to talk
about death and dying at the dinner table.

But I didn’t go into medicine
like so many of my family members.

Instead, I went to architecture school
to learn how to design.

And while I was there,
I began to be curious

about what would happen
to my physical body after I died.

What would my nearest
and dearest do with me?

So if the existence
and the fact of your own mortality

doesn’t get you down,

the state of our current
funerary practices will.

Today, almost 50 percent of Americans
choose conventional burial.

Conventional burial begins with embalming,

where funeral staff drain bodily fluid

and replace it with a mixture
designed to preserve the corpse

and give it a lifelike glow.

Then, as you know,
bodies are buried in a casket

in a concrete-lined grave

in a cemetery.

All told, in US cemeteries,

we bury enough metal
to build a Golden Gate Bridge,

enough wood to build
1,800 single family homes,

and enough formaldehyde-laden
embalming fluid

to fill eight Olympic-size swimming pools.

In addition, cemeteries
all over the world are reaching capacity.

Turns out, it doesn’t really
make good business sense

to sell someone
a piece of land for eternity.

(Laughter)

Whose idea was that?

In some places, you can’t buy a plot
no matter how much money you have.

As a result, cremation rates
have risen fast.

In 1950, if you suggested your grandmother
be incinerated after she died,

you’d probably be kicked
from the family deathbed.

But today, almost half
of Americans choose cremation,

citing simpler,

cheaper

and more ecological as reasons.

I used to think that cremation
was a sustainable form of disposition,

but just think about it for a second.

Cremation destroys the potential we have

to give back to the earth
after we’ve died.

It uses an energy-intensive process
to turn bodies into ash,

polluting the air
and contributing to climate change.

All told, cremations in the US

emit a staggering 600 million
pounds of carbon dioxide

into the atmosphere annually.

The truly awful truth

is that the very last thing
that most of us will do on this earth

is poison it.

It’s like we’ve created, accepted
and death-denied our way into a status quo

that puts as much distance
between ourselves and nature

as is humanly possible.

Our modern funerary practices
are designed to stave off

the natural processes
that happen to a body after death.

In other words, they’re meant
to prevent us from decomposing.

But the truth

is that nature is really,
really good at death.

We’ve all seen it.

When organic material dies in nature,

microbes and bacteria
break it down into nutrient-rich soil,

completing the life cycle.

In nature, death creates life.

Back in architecture school,
I was thinking about all this,

and I set out on a plan
to redesign death care.

Could I create a system

that was beneficial to the earth

and that used nature as a guide
rather than something to be feared?

Something that was gentle to the planet?

That planet, after all,
supports our living bodies

our whole lives.

And while I was mulling this all over

over the drawing board,

the phone rang.

It was my friend Kate.

She was like, “Hey,
have you heard about the farmers

who are composting whole cows?”

And I was like, “Mmmm.”

(Laughter)

Turns out that farmers
in agricultural institutions

have been practicing something
called livestock mortality composting

for decades.

Mortality composting is where
you take an animal high in nitrogen

and cover it with co-composting materials
that are high in carbon.

It’s an aerobic process,
so it requires oxygen,

and it requires
plenty of moisture as well.

In the most basic setup, a cow
is covered with a few feet of wood chips,

which are high in carbon,

and left outside for nature,
for breezes to provide oxygen

and rain to provide moisture.

In about nine months,

all that remains
is a nutrient-rich compost.

The flesh has been decomposed entirely,

as have the bones.

I know.

(Laughter)

So I would definitely
call myself a decomposition nerd,

but I am far, far from a scientist,

and one way you can tell this is true

is that I have often called
the process of composting “magic.”

(Laughter)

So basically, all we humans need to do

is create the right environment
for nature to do its job.

It’s like the opposite
of antibacterial soap.

Instead of fighting them,

we welcome microbes and bacteria
in with open arms.

These tiny, amazing creatures

break down molecules
into smaller molecules and atoms,

which are then incorporated
into new molecules.

In other words, that cow is transformed.

It’s no longer a cow.

It’s been cycled back into nature.

See? Magic.

You can probably imagine
the light bulb that went off in my head

after I received that phone call.

I began designing a system

based on the principles
of livestock mortality composting

that would take human beings
and transform them into soil.

Fast-forward five years

and the project has grown in ways
I truly never could have imagined.

We’ve created a scalable,
replicable non-profit urban model

based on the science
of livestock mortality composting

that turns human beings into soil.

We’ve partnered and collaborated
with experts in soil science,

decomposition, alternative death care,

law and architecture.

We’ve raised funds
from foundations and individuals

in order to design
a prototype of this system,

and we’ve heard from tens of thousands
of people all over the world

who want this option to be available.

OK.

In the next few years,

it’s our goal to build the first
full-scale human composting facility

right in the city of Seattle.

(Applause)

Imagine it,

part public park,

part funeral home,

part memorial to the people we love,

a place where we can reconnect
with the cycles of nature

and treat bodies
with gentleness and respect.

The infrastructure is simple.

Inside a vertical core,

bodies and wood chips undergo
accelerated natural decomposition,

or composting,

and are transformed into soil.

When someone dies, their body
is taken to a human composting facility.

After wrapping the deceased
in a simple shroud,

friends and family carry the body
to the top of the core,

which contains the natural
decomposition system.

During a laying in ceremony,

they gently place the body into the core

and cover it with wood chips.

This begins the gentle transformation
from human to soil.

Over the next few weeks,
the body decomposes naturally.

Microbes and bacteria
break down carbon, then protein,

to create a new substance,

a rich, earthy soil.

This soil can then be used
to grow new life.

Eventually, you could be a lemon tree.

(Applause)

Yeah, thank you.

(Applause)

Who’s thinking about
lemon meringue pie right now?

(Laughter)

A lemon drop?

Something stronger?

So in addition to housing the core,

these buildings will function
to support the grieving

by providing space for memorial services
and end-of-life planning.

The potential for repurposing is huge.

Old churches and industrial warehouses
can be converted into places

where we create soil and honor life.

We want to bring back the aspect of ritual

that’s been diluted
over the past hundred years

as cremation rates have risen

and religious affiliation has declined.

Our Seattle facility will function
as a model for these places

all over the world.

We’ve heard from communities
in South Africa, Australia,

the UK, Canada and beyond.

We’re creating a design toolkit

that will help others
design and build facilities

that will contain technical specifications

and regulatory best practices.

We want to help individuals,
organizations,

and down the road, municipalities

design and build facilities
in their own cities.

The idea is that every one of these places
should look and feel completely different

with the same system inside.

They’re really meant to be designed
for the neighborhood in which they reside

and the community which they serve.

The other idea is
for supportive staff to be on hand

to help families with the care
and preparation of loved ones' bodies.

We’re banishing practices
that bewilder and disempower

and creating a system
that is beautiful and meaningful

and transparent.

We believe that access
to ecological death care

is a human right.

OK, so you know the old saying,

if you can compost a cow,
you can compost a human?

(Laughter)

Turns out, it’s true.

Since 2014, we’ve been
running a pilot project

in the hills of North Carolina

with the Forensic Anthropology Department
at Western Carolina University.

Six donor bodies
have been covered in wood chips,

oxygen provided by breezes,

microbes and bacteria doing their jobs.

This pilot program has allowed us
to demonstrate that it’s possible

to harness the incredible power
of natural decomposition

to turn human bodies into soil,

and we’re working
with other universities as well.

Soil scientists
at Washington State University,

the grad students, anyway,

are working to compost
teeth with amalgam fillings

so that we can understand
what happens to the mercury therein.

Next up, we’ll be beginning experiments

to determine what happens
to chemo drugs and pharmaceuticals

during the composting process,

and whether additional
remediation will be needed.

By the way,

composting creates a great deal of heat,

especially this particular
type of composting.

One week after we began
composting our fifth donor body,

the temperature inside
that mound of wood chips

reached 158 degrees Fahrenheit.

Imagine harnessing that heat
to create energy

or comfort the grieving on a cold day.

The death care revolution has begun.

It’s an exciting time to be alive.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我的名字是卡特里娜·斯佩德
,我在一个医疗世家长大,

在餐桌上谈论死亡和死亡是很正常的。

但我没有
像我的许多家庭成员那样进入医学界。

相反,我去建筑
学校学习如何设计。

当我在那里的时候,
我开始好奇

我死后我的身体会发生什么。


最亲近的人会对我做什么?

因此,如果
您自己的死亡的存在和事实

不会让您失望,

那么我们目前的
丧葬实践状态将会。

今天,近 50% 的美国人
选择传统葬礼。

传统的埋葬从防腐开始

,葬礼工作人员排出体液

,并用一种混合物取而代之,
旨在保护尸体

并赋予其栩栩如生的光彩。

然后,如你所知,
尸体被埋在墓地

的混凝土内衬坟墓

中的棺材中。

总而言之,在美国的墓地里,

我们埋下的金属
足够建造一座金门大桥,

足够的木材可以建造
1,800 座单户住宅,

以及足够的含甲醛的
防腐液

来填满八个奥林匹克规格的游泳池。

此外,
世界各地的墓地正在达到容量上限。

事实证明,向某人永久出售一块土地并没有
真正的商业意义

(笑声) 那是

谁的主意?

在有些地方,你有多少钱也买不到地块

结果,火化率
迅速上升。

在 1950 年,如果您建议在祖母
死后将其焚烧,

您可能会被赶
下家门。

但今天,几乎一半
的美国人选择火葬,

理由是更简单、

更便宜

和更环保。

我曾经认为火葬
是一种可持续的处置形式,

但请想一想。

火葬破坏了我们死后必须回馈地球的潜力

它使用能源密集型
过程将尸体变成灰烬,

污染空气
并导致气候变化。

总而言之,美国的火葬每年向大气

排放惊人的 6 亿
磅二氧化碳

真正可怕的事实

是,
我们大多数人在这个地球上要做的最后一件事

就是毒化它。

就像我们创造、接受
和否认死亡一样,进入了一种现状

,使
我们与自然

之间的距离尽可能远。

我们现代的葬礼
做法旨在避免

死后发生在身体上的自然过程。

换句话说,它们是
为了防止我们分解。

但事实

是,大自然
真的非常非常擅长死亡。

我们都见过。

当有机物质在自然界中死亡时,

微生物和细菌
会将其分解成营养丰富的土壤,从而

完成生命周期。

在自然界中,死亡创造生命。

回到建筑学院,
我正在考虑这一切,

并着手制定
重新设计死亡护理的计划。

我能否创建一个

对地球有益的系统,

并以自然为指导
而不是令人恐惧的东西?

对地球温和的东西?

毕竟,那个星球
支撑着

我们一生的生命体。

当我在绘图板上仔细考虑这个问题时

,电话响了。

是我的朋友凯特。

她就像,“嘿,
你听说过

农民将整头奶牛堆肥吗?”

我当时想,“嗯。”

(笑声)

事实证明,
农业机构的农民几十年来

一直在实践一种
叫做牲畜死亡堆肥

的方法。

死亡堆肥是指
你将动物的氮含量高,

并用高碳的共同堆肥材料覆盖它

这是一个有氧过程,
因此需要氧气

,还需要
大量水分。

在最基本的设置中,一头牛身上
覆盖着几英尺厚的木屑,

这些木屑富含碳

,留在外面供大自然使用
,微风提供氧气

,雨水提供水分。

大约九个月

后,剩下的
就是营养丰富的堆肥。

肉已经完全腐烂

,骨头也是如此。

我知道。

(笑声)

所以我肯定会
称自己为分解书呆子,

但我与科学家相去甚远,

你可以判断这是真的的一个方法

是,我经常称
堆肥的过程为“魔法”。

(笑声)

所以基本上,我们人类需要做的

就是为大自然创造合适的环境
来完成它的工作。

这就像
抗菌肥皂的反面。 我们

没有与它们抗争,

而是张开双臂欢迎微生物和
细菌。

这些微小而神奇的生物

将分子
分解成更小的分子和原子

,然后将它们结合
成新的分子。

换句话说,那头牛被改造了。

它不再是一头牛了。

它被循环回大自然。

看? 魔法。

你可以想象接到那个电话
后,我脑子里的灯泡就亮了

我开始设计一个

基于
牲畜死亡率堆肥原理的系统

,它将
人类转化为土壤。

快进五年

,该项目以
我真正无法想象的方式发展。

我们基于将人类变成土壤的牲畜死亡率堆肥科学,创建了一个可扩展、
可复制的非营利性城市模型

我们与
土壤科学、

分解、替代性死亡护理、

法律和建筑方面的专家合作并合作。

为了设计
这个系统的原型,我们从基金会和个人那里筹集了资金

,我们已经听到
全世界成千上万的

人希望这个选项可用。

行。

在接下来的几年里

,我们的目标是在西雅图市建造第一个
全面的人类堆肥

设施。

(掌声)

想象一下,这里既是

公园,又

是殡仪馆,

是我们所爱之人的纪念馆,

是一个我们可以重新
接触自然循环,以温柔

和尊重对待身体的地方

基础设施很简单。

在垂直核心内,

尸体和木屑经历
加速的自然分解

或堆肥,

并转化为土壤。

当有人死去时,他们的尸体
会被送到人类堆肥设施。

用简单的裹尸布包裹死者后,

朋友和家人将尸体
抬到

包含自然
分解系统的核心顶部。

在铺设仪式中,

他们轻轻地将尸体放入核心

并用木屑覆盖。

这开始了
从人类到土壤的温和转变。

在接下来的几周内
,身体会自然分解。

微生物和细菌
分解碳,然后分解蛋白质

,创造出一种新物质,

一种肥沃的土质土壤。

这种土壤可以
用来培育新的生命。

最终,你可能是一棵柠檬树。

(掌声)

好的,谢谢。

(掌声)现在

谁在想
柠檬酥皮派?

(笑声

) 柠檬滴?

更强大的东西?

因此,除了容纳核心外,

这些建筑还将

通过为纪念服务
和临终规划提供空间来支持悲伤。

再利用的潜力是巨大的。

古老的教堂和工业仓库
可以改造成

我们创造土壤和尊重生命的地方。

我们希望恢复

过去一百年来

随着火葬率上升

和宗教信仰下降而被淡化的仪式方面。

我们的西雅图工厂将
成为世界各地这些地方的典范

我们收到了来自
南非、澳大利亚

、英国、加拿大及其他地区的社区的反馈。

我们正在创建一个设计工具包

,以帮助其他人
设计和建造

包含技术规范

和监管最佳实践的设施。

我们希望帮助个人、
组织

以及未来的市政当局

在他们自己的城市设计和建造设施。

这个想法是,这些地方中的每一个都
应该

在内部使用相同的系统时看起来和感觉完全不同。

它们真的是为
他们

居住的社区和他们所服务的社区而设计的。

另一个想法是
让支持人员随时待命

,帮助家庭照顾
和准备亲人的身体。

我们正在摒弃
令人困惑和削弱权力的做法,

并创建
一个美丽、有意义

和透明的系统。

我们认为,
获得生态死亡护理

是一项人权。

好的,所以你知道那句老话,

如果你可以堆肥一头牛,
你就可以堆肥一个人?

(笑声)

事实证明,这是真的。

自 2014 年以来,我们一直


西卡罗来纳大学法医人类学系一起在北卡罗来纳州的山区开展试点项目。

六具捐赠者的
尸体被木屑、

微风提供的氧气、

微生物和细菌所覆盖。

这个试点项目让
我们证明了

利用自然分解

的惊人力量将人体变成土壤是可能的

,我们也在
与其他大学合作。 无论如何,

华盛顿州立大学的土壤科学家

,研究生

正在努力
用汞合金填充物堆肥牙齿,

以便我们了解
其中的汞会发生什么变化。

接下来,我们将开始实验,

以确定
化学药物和药物

在堆肥过程中会发生什么,

以及是否需要额外的
补救措施。

顺便说一句,

堆肥会产生大量热量,

尤其是这种特殊
类型的堆肥。

在我们开始
对我们的第五个供体进行堆肥一周后,那堆木屑

内的温度

达到了 158 华氏度。

想象一下,

在寒冷的日子里,利用这种热量来创造能量或安慰悲伤的人。

死亡护理革命已经开始。

活着是一个激动人心的时刻。

谢谢你。

(掌声)