Originally founded in 1891 as a weaving mill for industrial belting, Göteborgs Remfabrik operated for nearly a century before closing its doors in 1977. Remarkably, very few changes were made during the last decades of its operation, leaving all the original looms, transmissions, and tools exactly as they were.
When the Göteborg City Council proposed demolishing the building to make room for a highway, the Swedish National Heritage Board intervened and protected the site in 1984. Today, the preserved factory stands as one of the best examples of early 20th-century textile production in Scandinavia and functions as a museum run entirely by volunteers.
