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Too Broke To Die

WeiYi Liu

Profile picture of WeiYi Liu

Spatial designer, writer, and director with a background in Interior Design and Narrative Environments. I create story-driven spaces that blend physical design with emotional experience, exploring the intersection of culture, behavior, and environment. 

Spatial designer, writer, and director with a background in Interior Design and Narrative Environ...

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Too Broke to Die responds to Beijing’s burial crisis, where cemetery plots cost around £14,000—far more than the city’s median annual income of £2,000. With no new cemeteries allowed and cremation mandated, families face limited, costly options. Traditional burials are fading, leaving many unable to afford a respectful farewell. 

Our project reimagines remembrance by drawing on Beijing’s cultural roots. Most cemeteries lie far from the city, requiring 1.5 hours of travel each way. Yet Chinese tradition values burial in the earth for peace in the afterlife. People are forced to choose between high costs and abandoning these beliefs. 

Our pilot, Gui Chen Ci Tang(归尘瓷堂), transforms a Cold War shelter into an underground cemetery. “Ci” means both porcelain and farewell; “Ci Tang” refers to ancestral halls. The space is shaped like a cave, with mountain and water elements inspired by traditional grave aesthetics. 

Ashes are turned into bone china tiles to help fund the site, potentially making services free for families. These objects offer a lasting, tangible way to grieve and remember. 

Too Broke to Die proposes a new, dignified, and affordable way to honour the dead in a city running out of space to mourn. 

A project Co-directed with Stella Wang.

Collabrators:

Mr.Huang, 3D Animation Specialist

Xavier Llarch Font, Project Mentor

Tutorial Group Peers, Creative Thinking Contributors

Final work

A man walks through a cave-like hallway with soft LED lights and shoji-style walls, inspired by fengshui.

Spatial Design of the Hallway

Cave-inspired corridor embracing Chinese fengshui, with flowing LED lights and curved walls evoking harmony and serenity. 

People mourn in a softly lit room with large glowing memorial tiles arranged in vertical columns.

Spatial design of the Memorial Hall

Suspended light towers honour ancestors in a serene memorial hall, where glowing names and soft shadows evoke reverence and continuity.

A person kneels by a small wall plaque with flowers, in a corridor of glowing curved grid panels.

Worshiping ancestors

The wall curves into a shelf-like table, providing a space for mourners to kneel and worship their departed family members. 

Too Broke to Die: Where the Living Can't Afford the Dead

When land runs out and tradition endures, how should a city bury not only its dead, but also the memories, histories, and promises they carry? 

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Too Broke To Die

Too Broke to Die responds to Beijing’s burial crisis, where cemetery plots cost around £14,000—far more than the city’s median annual income of £2,000. With no new cemeteries allowed and cremation mandated, families face limited, costly options. Traditional burials ar...

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