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Sweden Moves Kiruna's 1912 Wooden Church to New Site in Two-Day Operation

  • Kiruna Church, a 672-ton, 113-year-old wooden building in northern Sweden, began a rare two-day move to a new town center in August 2025.
  • The relocation responds to ground fissures from expanding iron ore mining beneath Kiruna, forcing a wider multi-decade project to shift much of the town since 2004.
  • The church was carefully lifted onto remote-controlled trailers that travel slowly along a specially widened 24-meter road cleared of obstructions for the 5-km journey.
  • Project manager Stefan Holmblad Johansson said, "This is a very special task for me," adding, "We don't have a margin of error" but confirmed "everything is under control."
  • The move preserves a beloved landmark voted Sweden's best pre-1950 building and enables the mine operator LKAB to continue extracting ore while reshaping Kiruna for future decades.
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The transfer lasted two days and was carried out by two trailers

·Spain
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The church of the city of Kiruna, threatened by the instability of the ground due to the exploitation of an iron ore deposit, was moved for two days thanks to remote-controlled trailers, which advanced to 500 metres per hour.

·Paris, France
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Your Alaska Link broke the news in on Friday, August 15, 2025.
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