Refering to this closed question, I made a test using a fan, a styrofoam sheet and a scale as shown in the fig (a) and (b) 
Part of the weight of the sheet is supported by a rod close to the wall, and part by the scale. The scale shows 35 g if it is turned on before placing the load there. In order to better visualize the effect, I turned it on after the arrangement was done, without wind. In that way it shows 0g.
When the fan is turned on, the scale displays negative numbers, indicating the presence of a lift force. The force increases for increased fan velocity. The wind can only go to the right above the wall.
The intuitive explanation is that the wind creates a low pressure region above the sheet. My question is how the kinetic theory explains that "suction" effect? After all if the molecules are modeled as bouncing balls, with constant momentum between collisions, the average vertical component of the momentum should not be affected by the increased average horizontal momentum (the wind).
One additional question is: how to estimate that force as a function of the wind velocity?