0 a building where dead people's bodies are burned, usually as part of a funeral ceremony
1 a building where dead people’s bodies are burned
The vast majority of the early municipal crematoria were built within existing, long-standing cemeteries.
Ten years later, the figure had risen to 24.4 per cent, and the number of crematoria had increased to 82.
Then we went out under the roof outside and onto the lawns, and the coffin was still inside the crematorium.
By 1939, 54 crematoria had been opened, and 3.5 per cent of disposals were cremations.
A complex relationship was emerging between the complementary but essentially competing tasks of cemetery and crematorium management.
A means of mitigating the risk was to build crematoria within existing cemeteries.
The operation of crematoria clearly called for specialist scientific knowledge with regard to the operation of modern machinery.
They considered burning the waste in high temperature ovens; these refuse crematoria and incinerators reduced the volume of the refuse as well as the possibility of disease.