Imagine a small red cottage in the Swedish countryside. Quaint, familiar, almost storybook. Now imagine that same house quietly lifting twenty feet into the air as floodwaters rush in below.

A small red cottage on a lifting platform inside a modern building, surrounded by large windows and minimalist decor.

That’s the surreal brilliance of the Lift House, a concept from Ulf Mejergren Architects, now featured in ArkDes’s Beredd (Ready) exhibition in Stockholm.

What looks like a children’s drawing of home becomes an act of resilience, an a statement about our changing climate, and rising coastal waters.

A small red cottage elevated on a mechanical scissor lift, showcasing a unique art installation in a spacious gallery with windows and wooden flooring.

The Lift House sits on a massive scissor lift, its bold red silhouette both charming and defiant.

When danger approaches, the house simply rises above the chaos. No panic or need for frantic sandbagging.

A small red cottage with a black roof is elevated on a lift in an art gallery, surrounded by visitors. The structure has white-framed windows and a chimney.

We appreciate this architecture as adaptation.

UMA calls it a study in “temporary retreat,” an alternative to the old binaries of fight or flee.

A small red cottage with two windows, lifted into the air by a scissor lift mechanism, in an exhibition space with people in the background.

Now, this is clearly just a demonstration.

From afar, the Lift House looks like a traditional Scandinavian cabin with red siding, pitched roof, white trim.

But the closer you look, the more it unravels that illusion. The chimney is cut from MDF. The interiors are stripped to essentials. The entire structure is a study in efficiency, designed to stay under a strict 227-kilogram weight limit of the scissor lift.

A small red cottage lifted into the air by a scissor lift in an exhibition space, with people discussing around it.

To put this into use for a full-weight cabin or home would take some serious engineering.

Close-up of a window from a small red cottage, featuring white lace curtains and two candles on a windowsill.
A small red cottage with white windows and a black roof, elevated above a crowd in a museum setting.
Illustration of a small red cottage with measurements and a scissor lift mechanism, showing the house being elevated for flood protection, surrounded by people.

Images © Copyright Ulf Mejergren.


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1 Comment

  1. Good concept, Good Idea. Question: Does it work with a larger home? How large a home will it accommodate?

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