Editor’s Note: Dezeen is a leading design, interiors and architectural magazine. CNN Style has collaborated with Dezeen on a number of stories exploring the latest trends in architecture and design. Click here for more.

CNN  — 

Climate change poses a serious question: how will our cities cope with rising sea levels? Some architects believe that floating buildings offer the answer, and have come up with a wide variety of designs to prove it, from simple prefab homes to entirely amphibious neighborhoods.

Courtesy of BIG and Barcode Architects
In recent years climate change has posed a serious question about how our cities will cope with riding sea levels. Some architects believe floating buildings might be the answer. Like the floating IJburg waterfront building by BIG and Barcode Architects.
Courtesy of BIG and Barcode Architects
The 46,000-square-meter building is called Sluishuis and was designed as a gateway to IJburg -- a neighborhood set on artificial islands that float on the IJ lake.
Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group
The Urban Rigger in Copenhagen by BIG Architects consists of shipping containers stacked on a floating platform to create this bobbing student halls of residence.
Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group
The idea behind the Urban Rigger was to provide low cost accommodation for students.
Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group
These floating homes sit buoyantly in the center if Copenhagen in the capital's harbor.
Courtesy Design Museum
Makoko was built as a prototype floating school in Lagos, Nigeria. It was designed to house schooling facilities for the local slum district of Makoko.
Frédéric Soltan/Corbis via Getty Images
Because of the unpredictable water levels in the region, the former fishing village on Lagos Lagoon has over 100,000 houses that are on stilts.
Courtesy Jose Campos
The Floatwing is a prefabricated floating house designed by students from the University of Coimbra in Portugal.
Courtesy Jose Campos
The Floatwing can built to order and shipped almost anywhere in the world. It's designed to be self sustainable for up to a week at a time.
Kevin Scott/WENN/Newscom
Those who can bare the freezing temperatures of Lake Union in Seattle seek warmth in the WA Sauna positioned at the center of the lake. The sauna--designed by Seattle based design studio goCstudio--is positioned on top of 55 gallon floatation barrels.
Courtesy Jeroen Musch
The Water Villa by Framework Architects and Studio Prototype consists of a three storied floating building in the south of Amsterdam.
Courtesy Jeroen Musch
The inside of the building features labyrinth of glass and an inner patio, which helps provide light for the basement floor which is underwater.

Leading the charge is the Netherlands, which has long been a pioneer of water-based living. With over half of its landmass underwater, the country has a well-established canal infrastructure, but is also now taking even more ambitious leaps to transform its cities.

In Amsterdam, a new breed of contemporary houseboats has been popping up all over the city. Among these is a slatted timber structure by Framework Architecten and Studio Prototype, which shows how floating homes can easily feature a story submerged below the water.

A more ambitious proposal is also planned for the Dutch capital – earlier this year, Danish firm BIG and Rotterdam studio Barcode Architects revealed designs for a huge housing complex that will float on the IJ lake. The 46,000-square-meter building will provide a gateway to IJburg, a whole neighborhood set on artificial islands.

Courtesy of BIG and Barcode Architects
This 46,000-square-meter building is called Sluishuis and was designed as a gateway to IJburg-- a neighborhood set on artificial islands that float on the IJ lake.

BIG is also promoting floating architecture in its home city, having already completed a student housing building made from shipping containers in Copenhagen’s harbor. The project demonstrates how floating architecture can be achieved on a budget. “It’s the only building type that will never flood,” said BIG partner Kai-Uwe Bergmann when it completed last year.

Courtesy Design Museum
Makoko was built as a prototype floating school in Lagos, Nigeria. It was designed to house schooling facilities for the local slum district of Makoko.

One city where the risk of flooding is more critical than most is Lagos, Nigeria. In a bid to overcome the challenges of the rising tide, architect Kunlé Adeyemi has designed a number of floating buildings, including a school and a radio station. “Given the impact of climate change, we can begin to think a lot more about the opportunity for living with water as opposed to fighting it,” he said in a 2015 interview.

Some architects see floating architecture as an opportunity for easy travel. A team from Portugal’s University of Coimbra has created a prefabricated floating house that can be shipped anywhere in the world, allowing its occupants to take residence on some of the world’s most remote rivers and lakes.

Others are using this typology as an opportunity to have a bit of fun. In Seattle, visitors to the WA Sauna can take a plunge into a cold lake after warming up inside a floating wooden hut.

For more innovative architecture visit our friends at Dezeen here.