It is located in Clinton Township, Michigan.
"We specialize in full body cryo preservation of humans and pets."
"Members are afforded the opportunity to be preserved at cryogenic temperatures in hopes that future medical technology may be able to some day revive and restore to future health."
In 2016 there were 145 corpses and 125 pets preserved in tanks
The company was formed in 1976 and moved to their current location in 1993.
Now Cryonics and Cryogenics are not the same thing though there is relationship.
Cryogenics has to do with extremely low temperatures
Cryonics deals with a person's body or body parts being stored in a cryogenic vessel and later be "brought back to life" or defrosted I expect.
Interested?
Yes - those are all questions the cryonics companies would not want you to ask.
They cannot honestly guarantee anyone would "wake up" at all because even if it proved medically possible, it is impossible to guarantee that the facilities would be operating for long enough. Though how would anyone prove it would work, is anyone's guess...
Allegedly one of the leaders in this has received an award for managing to revive rabbits, but that's a small animal and the time involved would have been fairly short - and the award was within the trade, not from a recognised scientific or medical advancement organisation.
I think it foolish to pay good money for this "service", but I do not associate silly decisions with a "mental defect". Perhaps it exploits a mixture of natural fear of being dead, vanity and possibly curiosity.
One of the primary reasons for religion was to offer some sort of continuing life, but at least religions define that as existing as a "soul" and recognise that the body dissolves away. Perhaps for some, cryonics offers a chance of a corporeal "after-life" or "re-incarnation".
Cost? Newsweek asked: $36000 for the whole body, $12000 for a head.
It seems the body needs treating within minutes of death, by infusing it with chemicals that prevent ice forming, as that would damage or destroy the brain for a start.
This is how Newsweek summed it up:
"
n pursuit of life everlasting, some turn to God. Others turn to science. Or rather, something science-ish.
If
you've ever hoped to be cryogenically frozen, you might come across a
legal hurdle: while human cryonics is legal in several countries, you
have to be dead before going into the cryonics tank. Otherwise, freezing
someone alive is tantamount to killing. So, as it is, you can only get
your dead body or head frozen—and when thawed, you'd still be dead.
This
doesn't deter some people, who simply hope to be cryopreserved until
the day comes that humanity masters the art of resurrection, so
scientists can re-animate them and cure their ailments. Or upload their
consciousness into the cloud. Whichever comes first. "
I like that last sentence! Note though the comment that you'd be dead when frozen, and still dead when thawed. The magazine goes on to relay The Telegraph reporting that one cryonics company considering setting up in a country where euthanasia is legal, to bypass some of the legal barriers.
Creepy? Oh, definitely very unsettling and bizarre. Naked exploitation too....