Sweden is moving its 113-year-old Kiruna Church on wheels to escape a giant iron ore mine. A €45m feat of engineering, heritage and survival.
Sweden puts Kiruna Church on wheels in epic relocation:
When the ground beneath your town starts crumbling thanks to the world’s biggest iron ore mine, you don’t argue. You pack up and move. And in Sweden’s Arctic north, that includes putting the nation’s favourite church on wheels.
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A church on the move
On Tuesday, August 19, the 113-year-old Kiruna Church, a 672-tonne Lutheran landmark often voted Sweden’s most beautiful building, began its two-day crawl to a brand-new city centre. Perched on a convoy of remote-controlled flatbed trailers, the wooden giant is trundling along at half a kilometre an hour, covering about 5 kilometres (3 miles) in total.
It is not quite Formula One, but it is drawing a crowd. At least 10,000 spectators are expected, including Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf, who will watch the slow-motion spectacle unfold.
Engineering meets Eurovision
The move is part of a decades-long plan to relocate most of Kiruna after mining weakened the ground beneath its historic heart. State-owned miner LKAB, which runs the vast underground operation, is footing the bill. The price tag is estimated at 500 million kronor (€45 million / £38 million / $52 million). Roads had to be widened to make way for the rolling cathedral.
To keep spirits high, Swedish broadcaster SVT has branded the event “The Great Church Walk” and is streaming it live. Sweden’s Eurovision 2025 entry, pop act KAJ, has also been booked to perform for the thousands lining the route.
‘The church is Kiruna’s soul in some way, and in some way it’s a safe place,’ said local vicar Lena Tjärnberg in an interview with Reuters. ‘For me, it’s like a day of joy. But I think people also feel sad because we have to leave this place.’
More than bricks and beams
Kiruna Church is not just famous for its size. Designed by architect Gustaf Wickman, the 40-metre-tall structure carries Sami-inspired detailing in its pews, honouring the indigenous people of the region.
But while many marvel at the relocation feat, the Sami community has raised red flags. They warn that the mine’s continued expansion is threatening the traditional migration routes of reindeer herds, which have been central to Sami culture and livelihood for thousands of years.
The bigger picture
The church is only the most photogenic part of a massive upheaval. Around 3,000 homes and 6,000 residents will eventually be moved as the Arctic town reshapes itself around the mine that sustains it and undermines it.
So what do you call a 113-year-old, 672-tonne church that goes walkabout at half a kilometre an hour? In Kiruna, they just call it Tuesday.
But the long haul is only beginning. Sweden’s relocation is one of the largest of its kind in Europe and may become a global case study for towns caught between heritage and extraction. In Germany’s lignite mining regions – from Lusatia to Garzweiler -hundreds of villages and tens of thousands of people have already been uprooted to make way for open-pit coal. Kiruna’s story is not unique, but it’s defiant. History doesn’t stay buried.
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