When we’ve seen homes propped up on stilts or beams for foundation or basement repairs, it always amazes us. The sheer weight and fragility of such a big structure is quite the undertaking.

That concept has been super-sized for this project in Kiruna, Sweden, where one of the country’s largest wooden buildings, and most beloved churches was recently relocated.

Located in Northern Sweden’s Lapland area, it’s one piece of the entire town being relocated.

A large transport vehicle with red wheels and yellow cargo containers is parked under a distinctive, red-roofed building with decorative statues and large windows, partially obscured by nearby foliage.
Image via Mammoet and Veidekke.

Requiring the help of specialist heavy-lift company Mammoet, the Kiruna Church was moved to make way for the town’s expanding iron ore mine. The operation was dubbed ‘the great church walk’, and was quite the undertaking.

Working with Norwegian construction and civil engineering company Veidekke, the 713-ton church building was carefully jacked up onto two trains of 28 axle lines of self-propelled modular transporters (SPMTs).

If that’s not specialty equipment, we don’t know what is.

A large red wooden building being transported on a flatbed truck, with workers in bright yellow vests supervising the movement under a blue sky.
Image via Mammoet and Veidekke.

Via DesignBoom:

“The 713-tonne church, built in the early 20th century, was transported in one piece as part of Kiruna’s relocation project.

The town, situated above vast mineral reserves, has faced subsidence caused by continuous extraction, an operation estimated to yield the equivalent of six Eiffel Towers’ worth of ore every day.

The 113 year old church was relocated a mere 5 km away to a new location, but that journey still took a full two days to complete.

A large red building with a steeply pitched roof is being transported on a yellow and red flatbed. The sky is partly cloudy.
Image via Mammoet and Veidekke.

Traveling on widened roads for the occasion, the church inched along on the specialty equipment, while town residents and visitors looked on.

Aerial view of a large, red-roofed building with a unique architectural design, surrounded by gravel pathways, trees, and construction areas.
Image via Veidekke.
A large red and yellow transport vehicle parked in front of a distinctive architectural building with a steeply sloped roof and large windows, under a clear blue sky.
Image via Veidekke.
A large red and yellow transport vehicle is moving a building, with a traditional wooden tower in the background.
Image via Veidekke.

The landmark building was successfully moved, and gently set down on concrete foundations at its new home.

A worker in a high-visibility jacket walks past a large wooden building being transported on a special moving platform.
Image via Veidekke.
Aerial view of a large red building being transported on a flatbed truck, surrounded by greenery and spectators along a road.
Image via Veidekke.
A large, red building being transported on a flatbed trailer with workers in safety vests present in a green outdoor setting under a blue sky.
Image via Mammoet and Veidekke.

Images © Copyright Mammoet and Veidekke.

Seeking more? Check out this Victorian home being moved on the busy streets of San Francisco. 🌉



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Author

Ben VanderVeen is the founder and editor of Moss & Fog, one of the web’s longest-running visual culture destinations. Since 2009, he’s been finding and framing the most beautiful, surprising, and thought-provoking work in art, architecture, design, and nature — reaching over 325,000 readers each month. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

1 Comment

  1. I do not know how to comment on a different M & F posting, but just to say, the Jubalaires are or were a fabulous group.

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