high-rise cemeteries
PETAH TIKVA, Israel (AP) — At first glance, the multi-tiered jungle of concrete off a major central Israeli highway does not appear unusual in
this city of bland high-rises. But the burgeoning towers are
groundbreaking when you consider its future tenants: They will be homes
not for the living but rather the dead. ...
"The source of all this is that there is simply no room," said Tuvia
Sagiv, an architect who specializes in dense burial design. "It's
unreasonable that we will live one on top of the other in tall apartment
buildings and then die in villas. If we have already agreed to live one
on top of the other, then we can die one on top of the other."
Can't wait to hear the outrage when a palestinian rocket hits one.
ReplyDelete... and then there's the question of who gets the penthouse.
ReplyDeleteAh, the outrage of "hey, we paid for the top floor, you can't build on top of grandma".
ReplyDelete