Author Archives: xinyi wu

Recent Environmental Analysis graduate from Pitzer College, studies how urbanization and real estate reshape death rituals in China. Her thesis examines bone ash apartments as modern spaces of ancestral remembrance and shifting cultural values.
香港的高层住宅楼群,背靠绿色山体,象征可能隐藏着骨灰房的中国城市中典型的居住空间。

Space for the Departed: Bone Ash Apartments as an Alternative to Cemeteries in Urban China

Many people in China have started buying residential apartments, not to live in, but to store the ashes of deceased family members. These are called bone ash apartments. Some people think it’s creepy and unlucky to be neighbors with them. Others say, “Honestly, I’d rather have dead neighbors than noisy ones.” So, I started asking, how did bone ash apartments become a real alternative to cemeteries in China? This isn’t just about space—it’s about how land, death, tradition, economy, and policy collide in today’s urban China (UN-Habitat 2020). (read more...)