JERUSALEM (AP) — A beehive-like structure built deep underground in Jerusalem is providing an innovative solution for the holy city's chronic shortage of burial space for the dead. Tunnels stretching more than a kilometer (half mile) in length beneath Jerusalem's main cemetery have been carefully excavated over the past two years to make room for some 22,000 graves — enough space to meet the city's needs for the next decade. A 50-meter (55-yard) elevator shaft will connect the world above with the world below. "We came up with this idea to provide a solution under the cemetery with burial structures, but also hidden from the eye," said Arik Glazer, chief executive of Rolzur Tunneling.