The Swiss city of Zurich announced Friday it would not use the 62 Ikea refugee shelters it has purchased to house asylum-seekers after a test showed they constituted a fire hazard.
Amid swelling numbers of refugees and other migrants arriving in Switzerland, Zurich city councillor Raphael Golta on Friday morning proudly unveiled a large hall filled with dozens of Ikea ready-to-assemble refugee shelters aimed to house 250 people by early January.
But just a few hours later, the city was forced to announce that a fire safety test had revealed the shelters do not live up to Swiss fire protection requirements.
The test showed the temporary shelters "are easily combustible," the city of Zurich said in a statement.
Golta voiced surprise at the verdict, but insisted the city had done its best under the circumstances.
"We have to host 40 percent more asylum seekers in the space of two months, so we had to move quickly to choose the best solution available," he told the RTS public broadcaster.
The shelters, developed in cooperation between Swedish furniture giant Ikea and the UN refugee agency, have already reportedly been deployed by the thousand in refugee camps and in places like Greece that are facing a heavy influx of migrants.
The city of Zurich said it had relied on safety information from the UNHCR and a Swedish study.
But regional authorities had requested a new test after learning that a German report this week raised concerns about the accuracy of the Swedish study.
UNHCR spokeswoman Anja Klug told Swiss news agency ATS Friday that the organisation was preparing to compare the Swiss and Swedish safety test results.
"If we discover problems, we will seek a solution," she said, stressing though that the shelters are "emergency housing, temporary solutions, which we consider better than tents."
The Swiss canton of Argau, which had been planning to house 300 asylum seekers in the Ikea shelters within a few months, also said Friday it was seeking alternatives following the Zurich test results.
Switzerland is expecting to receive some 39,000 asylum applicants this year, up from 23,800 in 2014.