Medical Examiner Morgue Cooler Advice
Medical examiner offices have different morgue cooling requirements than funeral homes. ME morgues must accommodate forensic holds, chain-of-custody integrity, autopsy workflow integration, and often OSHA or state medical examiner regulatory specifications. This post covers what ME offices need to know when sourcing a morgue cooler.
ME Office Morgue Cooler Requirements
- Temperature integrity: 36–39°F with alarm output. Digital controllers that log temperatures are preferred for evidence integrity.
- Capacity: ME offices must account for forensic holds that extend body retention beyond typical funeral home timelines. Size for 1.5–2× your average concurrent hold count.
- Access: Walk-in systems with roll-in cot access are strongly preferred. Body transfer from gurney to refrigerated vault should not require lifting.
- Vault option: High-volume ME offices often use vault-style morgue coolers with slide-out stainless trays for evidence compartmentalization.
Recommended Configurations for ME Offices
Small county ME (5–10 concurrent holds): 10×10 walk-in morgue cooler with interior cadaver rack system and roll-in access.
Mid-size ME office (10–20 concurrent holds): 10×16 or 10×20 walk-in morgue cooling system with rack system. AMC installs rack systems to maximize storage per square foot.
State ME / large jurisdiction: Custom walk-in morgue cooling system with multiple zones, vault-style compartmentalization, and integrated autopsy suite. AMC handles full-spec design.
Autopsy Suite Integration
AMC’s USPE division supplies autopsy tables, grossing stations, dissection sinks, and casework. A single PO covers your entire ME facility build. See: Medical Examiner Equipment™ hub and Pathology & Autopsy Equipment.





