Bios Incube - World's first incubator designed for the after life

2 years ago
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Bios Incube Is The First Incubator Designed to Grow Ashes Into Trees. The Bios Incube has officially launched to the general public and is now available to purchase exclusively on the Bios Urn website. The Bios Incube is a sophisticated and stylish tree incubator which aids in the growth process and comes alongside a complimentary app. It is the first tree incubator designed for the afterlife. The Bios Urn and Bios Incube aim to reintroduce man back into the natural cycle of life.This smart incubator allows you to engage with your tree like never before.

The world is running out of burial space, and utilizing sustainable design the Bios Incube seeks to address this relevant problem by providing a real-life solution. The Bios Urn and Bios Incube work in conjunction with one another; the Urn is planted seamlessly into the Bios Incube. Once the Incube is set up, users can monitor the progress of the plant’s growth using an application, which provides advice and maintenance tips. The Incube is equipped with a built-in self-watering system which is triggered by the sensor attached to soil´s surface. Water is held within the structure of the Incube, then automatically released homogeneously around the seed. The sensors in the Bios Incube detect levels of light exposure, assess electrical conductivity, and monitor moisture and temperature in the atmosphere and soil.

The Bios Incube is intended to serve as a catalyst for life and growth, and its design demonstrates this life-sustaining capability. What we at Bios Urn try to illustrate is that the end can also be the beginning. The Incube is 100% reusable and can be used to plant other living trees or plants, and nurture another Bios Urn. The goal of all of our products is to change the way people think about death by converting the end of life into a transformation and a return to life through nature.
.......................................................................Burial Pods-
Modern burial practices are an environmental nightmare. Toxic chemicals from the embalming process leach into the air and soil. Caskets and burial vaults use a ton of materials. And memorial parks clear acres of land while soaking up significant amounts of water and pesticides to keep lawns green. And cremation isn't any better. It, too, releases noxious chemicals into the atmosphere in the process. What, then, is the most environmentally friendly way to die?

"The best way is to allow your body to feed the earth or ocean in a way that is sustainable for future generations," says Susan Dobscha — a professor of marketing at Bentley University and editor of an upcoming book about the green burial industry, "Death and a Consumer Culture"

And a team of two Italian designers have devised a concept on how to do that.

Their project, called Capsula Mundi, aims to create eco-friendly egg-shaped burial pods that will house a body in place of a casket. The corpse will be placed in the fetal position within the pod and draped in a cloth of natural fibers. The team is also designing smaller versions of these pods, which can inter ashes instead of a body.

The biodegradable package, which will be made from potato and corn starches, would then be plunged into the ground and a tree of the deceased's choosing would be planted on top. Over time, the mixture of microbes and nutrients from the decaying corpse would feed the tree, effectively sprouting a new organism — the perfect circle of life.

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