Outside the apartment, a kayak and paddle indicate a city that has been flooded as a result of climate change.
Walking inside, Superflux wrote that the apartment shows that "The world has irrevocably changed, and the family home is now a space to not only live, but to survive."
Large areas of what would typically be a living space are instead devoted to growing food.
Inhabitants have come to rely on a diverse set of foods that can be grown indoors, including mushrooms...
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe entire apartment is aglow from the plant setups...
...giving it an almost otherworldly purple haze.
While it's clear inhabitants are growing food, other aspects of the apartment indicate other sources of nutrition.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdA handmade crab catcher gives another clue to the newly aquatic environment.
Future dinners could also consist of insects, like this recipe for wild pepper and roach stir fry.
A bookshelf gives another peak into what life might be like, with titles like "How to Cook in a Time of Scarcity."
And, more disturbingly, "Pets as Protein."
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdA newspaper also makes it clear that a food shortage has resulted from climate struggles.
A ration card shows the same.
A look out the apartment's window shows a flooded Singapore.
Though the exhibit might seem grim, the creators actually see it as hopeful.
The creators of the exhibit wrote that they hope it will show the resourcefulness of people as they adapt to a changing environment.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIt can be hard for people to envision how climate change will change aspects of day-to-day life.
"Our immersive simulation merges the macabre and the mundane as the social and economic consequences of climate change infiltrate the domestic space," Jon Arden, cofounder and artistic director of Superflux, said.
Anab Jain, the other cofounder and creative director of Superflux, agreed that fear and hopelessness make many people feel incapable of combatting climate change or envisioning the future.
This project, she says, is to show people that alternative, non-apocalyptic futures are possible.
Together, the city view, the tools, the artifacts, the plants – tell the story of adaptation and extreme measures people have had to make to, not just survive, but prosper in a post-climate change future" Jain said.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe apartment prototype is on display at the ArtScience Museum in Singapore until April.