
Moving furniture in a city without a car involves a lot of improvisation. You carry what you can, leave what you can’t, and replace what got lost somewhere between the last three apartments. For a lot of renters in their twenties, heavy furniture isn’t something you accumulate. It’s something you abandon. IKEA designers sat with that problem after visiting a series of London homes of young renters and watching the improvised solutions people were actually living with.
The result is KOMPISHÄNG, a collection of 11 portable pieces launching in the US in August 2026, built from solid pine, powder-coated steel, and durable canvas. The brief was direct: design furniture that can be moved with your body alone, without needing a car. Everything in the collection takes that constraint seriously, and the problem-solving starts the moment you pick something up.
Designer: IKEA
The desk assembles with two pulls and two clicks, no tools required, and has a built-in handle underneath so it can be carried from one room to another without putting anything else down. The side table folds almost completely flat and can be carried over the arm like a handbag. The mattress and pouffe have adjustable shoulder straps and travel like a backpack, then unfold into a guest bed or collapse into an extra seat when no one’s visiting.
The two stackable stools, priced at $60 for a set, are probably the most quietly clever pieces in the collection. They nest into each other for storage, but their legs also interlock to form a tiered shelving unit, turning two stools into a small display surface for a plant, a lamp, or a stack of books. It’s the kind of dual-function logic that feels genuinely thought through rather than incidental.
The accessories follow the same thinking. The canvas wardrobe organizer converts to a carry bag with one zip, so clothes travel already sorted rather than packed from scratch. The jute plant pot has large handles and a built-in rolling cover that protects whatever’s inside during transit, removing the usual anxiety around moving a plant. The red metal bookend with handles is one of IKEA’s more self-aware pieces: a bookshelf that knows most rentals don’t have one.
The pieces are priced between $9.99 and $99.99, which keeps the stakes low enough that replacing a piece or passing it to the next tenant isn’t a loss. The creative team behind the collection put longevity on the brief, too: the textiles can be washed, the wood furniture can be sanded and repainted, and the stated hope is that pieces move from one person to the next rather than ending up discarded. For furniture designed around the reality of constant change, the expectation of a long life is a telling detail.