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| official_name      = {{lang|fi|Helsingin kaupunki}}<br />{{lang|sv|Helsingfors stad}}<br />{{lang|en|City of Helsinki}}
| official_name      = {{lang|fi|Helsingin kaupunki}}<br />{{lang|sv|Helsingfors stad}}<br />{{lang|en|City of Helsinki}}
| native_name        = {{native name|sv|Helsingfors}}
| native_name        = {{native name|sv|Helsingfors}}
| nicknames          = Stadi (by city dwellers), Hesa (by country people),<ref name="nickname">{{cite web |last=Ainiala |first=Terhi |year=2009 |title=Place Names in the Construction of Social Identities: The Uses of Names of Helsinki |url=http://yorkspace.library.yorku.ca/xmlui/handle/10315/2924 |access-date=22 September 2011 |publisher=Research Institute for the Languages of Finland}}</ref> the Daughter of the Baltic,<ref name="nickname1"/> the Pearl of the Baltic Sea<ref name="nickname2"/>
| nicknames          = Stadi (by city dwellers), Hesa (by other Finnish people),<ref name="nickname">{{cite web |last=Ainiala |first=Terhi |year=2009 |title=Place Names in the Construction of Social Identities: The Uses of Names of Helsinki |url=http://yorkspace.library.yorku.ca/xmlui/handle/10315/2924 |access-date=22 September 2011 |publisher=Research Institute for the Languages of Finland}}</ref> the Daughter of the Baltic,<ref name="nickname1"/> the Pearl of the Baltic Sea<ref name="nickname2"/>
| settlement_type    = [[Capital city]]
| settlement_type    = [[Capital city]]
| image_skyline      = {{multiple image
| image_skyline      = {{multiple image
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|caption_align = center
|caption_align = center
}}
}}
| image_flag        = Flag_of_Helsinki.svg
| image_shield      = Helsinki.vaakuna.svg
| image_shield      = Helsinki.vaakuna.svg
| shield_size        = 80x80px
| shield_size        = 80x80px
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| subdivision_name3  = [[Helsinki metropolitan area]]
| subdivision_name3  = [[Helsinki metropolitan area]]
| leader_title      = [[Mayor of Helsinki|Mayor]]
| leader_title      = [[Mayor of Helsinki|Mayor]]
| leader_name        = [[Juhana Vartiainen]] ([[National Coalition Party (Finland)|Kok]])
| leader_name        = [[Daniel Sazonov]] ([[National Coalition Party (Finland)|Kok]])
| leader_title1      = Governing body
| leader_title1      = Governing body
| leader_name1      = [[City Council of Helsinki]]
| leader_name1      = [[City Council of Helsinki]]
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| website            = {{URL|https://www.hel.fi/en}}
| website            = {{URL|https://www.hel.fi/en}}
}}
}}
'''Helsinki'''{{efn|English: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|h|ɛ|l|s|ɪ|ŋ|k|i}} {{respell|HEL|sing|kee}} or {{IPAc-en|h|ɛ|l|ˈ|s|ɪ|ŋ|k|i|audio=en-us-Helsinki.ogg}} {{respell|hel|SING|kee}},<ref>{{Cite American Heritage Dictionary|Helsinki}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Helsinki |url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/helsinki |website=[[Collins English Dictionary]] |publisher=[[HarperCollins]]}}</ref> {{IPA|fi|ˈhelsiŋki|lang|Fin-Helsinki.ogg|small=no}}.}} ({{langx|sv|Helsingfors}}){{efn|{{IPA|sv-FI|helsiŋˈforsː|lang|Helsingfors.ogg|small=no}}, {{IPA|sv|hɛlsɪŋˈfɔʂː||sv-Helsingfors.ogg|label=Sweden Swedish:|small=no}}.}} is the [[Capital city|capital]] and most populous [[List of cities and towns in Finland|city]] in [[Finland]]. It is on the shore of the [[Gulf of Finland]] and is the seat of southern Finland's [[Uusimaa]] region. About {{formatnum:{{#expr:{{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} round -3}}}} people live in the municipality, with {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}}) /1000000 round 1 }} }}&nbsp;million in the [[Helsinki capital region|capital region]] and {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Mäntsälä}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Pornainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kirkkonummi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vihti}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Nurmijärvi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Hyvinkää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Tuusula}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kerava}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Järvenpää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Sipoo}}) /1000000 round 1 }}}}&nbsp;million in the [[Helsinki metropolitan area|metropolitan area]]. As the most populous [[List of urban areas in Finland by population|urban area]] in Finland, it is the country's most significant centre for politics, education, finance, culture, and research. Helsinki is {{convert|80|km}} north of [[Tallinn, Estonia]], {{convert|400|km}} east of [[Stockholm, Sweden]], and {{convert|300|km}} west of [[Saint Petersburg, Russia]]. Helsinki has significant [[History of Helsinki|historical connections]] with these three cities.{{citation needed|date=October 2024}}
'''Helsinki'''{{efn|English: {{IPAc-en|ˈ|h|ɛ|l|s|ɪ|ŋ|k|i}} {{respell|HEL|sing|kee}} or {{IPAc-en|h|ɛ|l|ˈ|s|ɪ|ŋ|k|i|audio=en-us-Helsinki.ogg}} {{respell|hel|SING|kee}},<ref>{{Cite American Heritage Dictionary|Helsinki}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Helsinki |url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/amp/english/helsinki |website=[[Collins English Dictionary]] |publisher=[[HarperCollins]]}}</ref> {{IPA|fi|ˈhelsiŋki|lang|Fin-Helsinki.ogg|small=no}}.}} ({{langx|sv|Helsingfors}}){{efn|{{IPA|sv-FI|helsiŋˈforsː|lang|Helsingfors.ogg|small=no}}.}} is the capital and most populous city in [[Finland]]. It is on the shore of the [[Gulf of Finland]] and is the seat of southern Finland's [[Uusimaa]] region. About {{formatnum:{{#expr:{{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} round -3}}}} people live in the municipality, with {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}}) /1000000 round 1 }} }}&nbsp;million in the [[Helsinki capital region|capital region]] and {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Mäntsälä}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Pornainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kirkkonummi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vihti}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Nurmijärvi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Hyvinkää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Tuusula}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kerava}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Järvenpää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Sipoo}}) /1000000 round 1 }}}}&nbsp;million in the [[Helsinki metropolitan area|metropolitan area]]. As the most populous [[List of urban areas in Finland by population|urban area]] in Finland, it is the country's most significant centre for politics, education, finance, culture, and research. Helsinki is {{convert|80|km}} north of [[Tallinn, Estonia]], {{convert|400|km}} east of [[Stockholm, Sweden]], and {{convert|300|km}} west of [[Saint Petersburg, Russia]].


Together with the cities of [[Espoo]], [[Vantaa]] and [[Kauniainen]]—and surrounding commuter towns,<ref>{{cite web |title=Cities of Finland |url=http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/region_cities/city_urban/city_maps/FI |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130518144548/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/region_cities/city_urban/city_maps/FI |archive-date=18 May 2013 |access-date=10 February 2013 |publisher=Eurostat}}</ref> including the neighbouring municipality of [[Sipoo]] to the east<ref>{{cite web|title=Sipoo - kahden keskuksen kunta Helsingin tuntumassa|url=https://ta.fi/ajankohtaista/499-sipoo-kahden-keskuksen-kunta-helsingin-tuntumassa|access-date=9 November 2021|website=ta.fi}}</ref>—Helsinki forms a [[Helsinki metropolitan area|metropolitan area]]. This area is often considered Finland's only metropolis and is the world's [[List of northernmost items#Cities and settlements|northernmost]] metropolitan area with over one million inhabitants. Additionally, it is the northernmost capital of an [[Member state of the European Union|EU member state]]. Helsinki is the [[List of the most populated municipalities in the Nordic countries|third-largest]] municipality in the Nordic countries, after Stockholm and [[Oslo]]. Its urban area is the [[List of urban areas in the Nordic countries|third-largest]] in the Nordic countries, after Stockholm and [[Copenhagen]]. [[Helsinki Airport]], in the neighbouring city of Vantaa, serves the city with frequent flights to numerous destinations in Europe, North America, and Asia.
Together with the cities of [[Espoo]], [[Vantaa]] and [[Kauniainen]]—and surrounding commuter towns,<ref>{{cite web |title=Cities of Finland |url=http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/region_cities/city_urban/city_maps/FI |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130518144548/http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/region_cities/city_urban/city_maps/FI |archive-date=18 May 2013 |access-date=10 February 2013 |publisher=Eurostat}}</ref> including the neighbouring municipality of [[Sipoo]] to the east<ref>{{cite web |title=Sipoo - kahden keskuksen kunta Helsingin tuntumassa |trans-title=Sipoo – a two‑centre municipality adjacent to Helsinki |url=https://ta.fi/ajankohtaista/499-sipoo-kahden-keskuksen-kunta-helsingin-tuntumassa |access-date=9 November 2021 |website=ta.fi |language=fi}}</ref>—Helsinki forms a [[Helsinki metropolitan area|metropolitan area]]. This area is often considered Finland's only metropolis and is the world's [[List of northernmost items#Cities and settlements|northernmost]] metropolitan area with over one million inhabitants. Additionally, it is the northernmost capital of an [[Member state of the European Union|EU member state]]. Helsinki is the [[List of the most populated municipalities in the Nordic countries|third-largest]] municipality in the Nordic countries, after Stockholm and [[Oslo]]. Its urban area is the [[List of urban areas in the Nordic countries|third-largest]] in the Nordic countries, after Stockholm and [[Copenhagen]]. [[Helsinki Airport]], in the neighbouring city of Vantaa, serves the city with frequent flights to numerous destinations in Europe, North America, and Asia.


Helsinki is a [[bilingual]] municipality with [[Finnish language|Finnish]] and [[Swedish language|Swedish]] as its official languages. The population consists of {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|0}}}} Finnish speakers, {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|0}}}} Swedish speakers, and {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language other|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|0}}}} speakers of other languages.<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final"/>
Helsinki is a [[bilingual]] municipality with [[Finnish language|Finnish]] and [[Swedish language|Swedish]] as its official languages. The population consists of {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|0}}}} Finnish speakers, {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|0}}}} Swedish speakers, and {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language other|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|0}}}} speakers of other languages.<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final"/>


Helsinki has hosted the [[1952 Summer Olympics]], the first [[Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe|CSCE]]/[[Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe|OSCE]] Summit in 1975, the first [[World Athletics Championships]] in 1983, the [[Eurovision Song Contest 2007|52nd Eurovision Song Contest]] in 2007 and it was the 2012 [[World Design Capital]].<ref name="Worlddesigncapital.com">{{cite web |title=Past capital: Helsinki |url=http://www.worlddesigncapital.com/world-design-capitals/past-capital-helsinki/ |access-date=19 May 2015 |publisher=Worlddesigncapital.com}}</ref>
Helsinki has hosted the [[1952 Summer Olympics]], the first [[Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe|CSCE]]/[[Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe|OSCE]] Summit in 1975, the first [[World Athletics Championships]] in 1983, the [[Eurovision Song Contest 2007|52nd Eurovision Song Contest]] in 2007 and it was the 2012 [[World Design Capital]].<ref name="Worlddesigncapital.com">{{cite web |title=Past capital: Helsinki |url=http://www.worlddesigncapital.com/world-design-capitals/past-capital-helsinki/ |access-date=19 May 2015 |publisher=Worlddesigncapital.com}}</ref> The city is recognized as a "[[Design Cities (UNESCO)|Design City]]" in 2014 by [[UNESCO]]'s [[Creative Cities Network]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.unesco.org/en/creative-cities/helsinki|title=Helsinki – Creative Cities Network|publisher=[[UNESCO]]|access-date=3 June 2025}}</ref>


Helsinki has one of the highest standards of urban living in the world. In 2011, the British magazine ''[[Monocle (UK magazine)|Monocle]]'' ranked Helsinki as the world's most liveable city in its [[City quality of life indices|livable cities index]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Most liveable city: Helsinki&nbsp;— Monocle Film / Affairs |url=http://monocle.com/film/affairs/most-liveable-city-helsinki/ |access-date=12 March 2013 |publisher=Monocle.com |archive-date=9 July 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150709213034/http://monocle.com/film/affairs/most-liveable-city-helsinki/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> In the [[Economist Intelligence Unit]]'s 2016 livability survey, Helsinki ranked ninth out of 140 cities.<ref name="2016 detail">{{cite web |title=Global Liveability Ranking 2016 |url=https://www.eiu.com/public/topical_report.aspx?campaignid=liveability2016 |website=www.eiu.com}}</ref> In July 2021, the American magazine ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' named Helsinki one of the world's greatest places, a city that "can grow into a burgeoning cultural nest in the future" and is already known as an [[Natural environment|environmental]] pioneer.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://time.com/collection/worlds-greatest-places-2021/6079245/helsinki/|title=Helsinki: The World's 100 Greatest Places of 2021|website=[[Time (magazine)|Time]]|access-date=16 December 2021}}</ref> In an international ''Cities of Choice'' survey conducted in 2021 by the [[Boston Consulting Group]] and the BCG Henderson Institute, Helsinki was ranked the third-best city in the world to live in, with [[London]] and [[New York City]] coming in first and second.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinkitimes.fi/finland/finland-news/domestic/19591-helsinki-comes-in-third-in-ranking-of-world-s-best-cities-to-live.html|title=Helsinki comes in third in ranking of world's best cities to live|work=[[Helsinki Times]]|date=14 July 2021|access-date=15 August 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cityam.com/london-hailed-as-worlds-city-of-choice-by-bcg-report/|title=London hailed as world's 'city of choice' in quality of life report|first=Farah|last=Ghouri|work=[[City A.M.]]|date=4 August 2021|access-date=15 August 2021}}</ref> In the ''[[Condé Nast Traveler]]'' magazine's 2023 Readers' Choice Awards, Helsinki was ranked the 4th-friendliest city in Europe.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cntraveller.com/gallery/friendliest-cities-europe|title=The friendliest cities in Europe: 2023 Readers' Choice Awards|work=[[Condé Nast Traveler]]|date=3 October 2023|access-date=21 October 2023}}</ref> Helsinki, along with [[Rovaniemi]] in [[Lapland (Finland)|Lapland]], is also one of Finland's most important [[tourism|tourist]] cities.<ref>[https://www.lapinkansa.fi/rovaniemen-ja-helsingin-johtajat-saivat-ministeril/3141180 Lapin Kansa: Rovaniemen ja Helsingin johtajat saivat ministeriltä tehtävän miettiä, miten matkailu nousee korona-ajan mentyä ohi – Rahaa on luvassa EU:n elpymispaketista] (in Finnish)</ref> Due to the large number of sea passengers, Helsinki is classified as a major port city,<ref>{{cite journal | doi=10.1080/03088839.2020.1802785 | title=The Southampton system: A new universal standard approach for port-city classification | year=2021 | last1=Roberts | first1=Toby | last2=Williams | first2=Ian | last3=Preston | first3=John | journal=Maritime Policy & Management | volume=48 | issue=4 | pages=530–542 | s2cid=225502755 | doi-access=free }}</ref> and in 2017 it was rated the world's busiest passenger port.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Helsinki becomes world's busiest passenger port |url=https://www.dailyfinland.fi/travel/3854/Helsinki-becomes-worlds-busiest-passenger-port |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=clickittefaq}}</ref>
Helsinki has one of the highest standards of urban living in the world. In 2011, the British magazine ''[[Monocle (UK magazine)|Monocle]]'' ranked Helsinki as the world's most liveable city in its [[City quality of life indices|livable cities index]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Most liveable city: Helsinki&nbsp;— Monocle Film / Affairs |url=http://monocle.com/film/affairs/most-liveable-city-helsinki/ |access-date=12 March 2013 |publisher=Monocle.com |archive-date=9 July 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150709213034/http://monocle.com/film/affairs/most-liveable-city-helsinki/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> In the [[Economist Intelligence Unit]]'s 2016 livability survey, Helsinki ranked ninth out of 140 cities.<ref name="2016 detail">{{cite web |title=Global Liveability Ranking 2016 |url=https://www.eiu.com/public/topical_report.aspx?campaignid=liveability2016 |website=www.eiu.com}}</ref> In July 2021, the American magazine ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' named Helsinki one of the world's greatest places, a city that "can grow into a burgeoning cultural nest in the future" and is already known as an [[Natural environment|environmental]] pioneer.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://time.com/collection/worlds-greatest-places-2021/6079245/helsinki/|title=Helsinki: The World's 100 Greatest Places of 2021|magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]]|access-date=16 December 2021|archive-date=1 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211201152432/https://time.com/collection/worlds-greatest-places-2021/6079245/helsinki/|url-status=dead}}</ref> In an international ''Cities of Choice'' survey conducted in 2021 by the [[Boston Consulting Group]] and the BCG Henderson Institute, Helsinki was ranked the third-best city in the world to live in, with [[London]] and [[New York City]] coming in first and second.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinkitimes.fi/finland/finland-news/domestic/19591-helsinki-comes-in-third-in-ranking-of-world-s-best-cities-to-live.html|title=Helsinki comes in third in ranking of world's best cities to live|work=[[Helsinki Times]]|date=14 July 2021|access-date=15 August 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cityam.com/london-hailed-as-worlds-city-of-choice-by-bcg-report/|title=London hailed as world's 'city of choice' in quality of life report|first=Farah|last=Ghouri|work=[[City A.M.]]|date=4 August 2021|access-date=15 August 2021}}</ref> In the ''[[Condé Nast Traveler]]'' magazine's 2023 Readers' Choice Awards, Helsinki was ranked the 4th-friendliest city in Europe.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cntraveller.com/gallery/friendliest-cities-europe|title=The friendliest cities in Europe: 2023 Readers' Choice Awards|work=[[Condé Nast Traveler]]|date=3 October 2023|access-date=21 October 2023}}</ref> Helsinki, along with [[Rovaniemi]] in [[Lapland (Finland)|Lapland]], is also one of Finland's most important [[tourism|tourist]] cities.<ref>[https://www.lapinkansa.fi/rovaniemen-ja-helsingin-johtajat-saivat-ministeril/3141180 Lapin Kansa: Rovaniemen ja Helsingin johtajat saivat ministeriltä tehtävän miettiä, miten matkailu nousee korona-ajan mentyä ohi – Rahaa on luvassa EU:n elpymispaketista] [Lapin Kansa: The leaders of Rovaniemi and Helsinki were tasked by the minister to consider how tourism will recover after the COVID era – Funding is expected from the EU recovery package] (in Finnish)</ref> Due to the large number of sea passengers, Helsinki is classified as a major port city,<ref>{{cite journal | doi=10.1080/03088839.2020.1802785 | title=The Southampton system: A new universal standard approach for port-city classification | year=2021 | last1=Roberts | first1=Toby | last2=Williams | first2=Ian | last3=Preston | first3=John | journal=Maritime Policy & Management | volume=48 | issue=4 | pages=530–542 | s2cid=225502755 | doi-access=free }}</ref> and in 2017 it was rated the world's busiest passenger port.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Helsinki becomes world's busiest passenger port |url=https://www.dailyfinland.fi/travel/3854/Helsinki-becomes-worlds-busiest-passenger-port |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=clickittefaq}}</ref>


==Etymology==
==Etymology==
According to a theory put forward in the 1630s, at the time of [[Swedish colonisation of Finland|Swedish colonisation]] of the Finnish coast, colonists from [[Hälsingland]] in central [[Sweden]] arrived at what is now the [[Vantaa (river)|Vantaa River]] and called it {{Lang|sv|Helsingå}} ('Helsinge River'), giving rise to the names of the [[Helsingin pitäjän kirkonkylä|village]] and [[Church of St. Lawrence, Vantaa|church]] of Helsinge in the 1300s.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Salminen |first=Tapio |title=Vantaan ja Helsingin pitäjän keskiaika |date=2013 |isbn=978-952-443-455-3 |location=Vantaa |publisher=Vantaan kaupunki |language=fi |trans-title=The Middle-age in Vantaa and Helsinki}}</ref> This theory is questionable, as dialect research suggests that the settlers came from [[Uppland]] and the surrounding areas.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Hellman |first=Sonja |date=7 June 2015 |title=Historiska fel upprättas i ny bok |language=sv |trans-title=Historical misinformation corrected in new book |work=Hufvudstadsbladet}}</ref> Others have suggested that the name derives from the Swedish word {{Lang|sv|helsing}}, an archaic form of the word {{Lang|sv|hals}} ('[[neck]]'), which refers to the narrowest part of a river, the [[rapids]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Utbildning & Vetenskap: Svenskfinland |url=http://veta.yle.fi/svenskfinland/artikel.php?id=23&subject=mellannyland |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080512081641/http://veta.yle.fi/svenskfinland/artikel.php?id=23&subject=mellannyland |archive-date=12 May 2008 |access-date=8 July 2009 |publisher=Veta.yle.fi}}</ref> Other Scandinavian towns in similar geographical locations were given similar names at the time, such as [[Helsingør]] in Denmark and [[Helsingborg]] in Sweden.
The origin of the name is uncertain. According to a theory put forward in the 1630s, at the time of [[Swedish colonisation of Finland|Swedish colonisation]] of the Finnish coast, colonists from [[Hälsingland]] in central [[Sweden]] arrived at what is now the [[Vantaa (river)|Vantaa River]] and called it {{Lang|sv|Helsingå}} ('Helsinge River'), giving rise to the names of the [[Helsingin pitäjän kirkonkylä|village]] and [[Church of St. Lawrence, Vantaa|church]] of Helsinge in the 1300s.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Salminen |first=Tapio |title=Vantaan ja Helsingin pitäjän keskiaika |date=2013 |isbn=978-952-443-455-3 |location=Vantaa |publisher=Vantaan kaupunki |language=fi |trans-title=The Middle-age in Vantaa and Helsinki}}</ref> This theory is questionable, as dialect research suggests that the settlers came from [[Uppland]] and the surrounding areas.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Hellman |first=Sonja |date=7 June 2015 |title=Historiska fel upprättas i ny bok |language=sv |trans-title=Historical misinformation corrected in new book |work=Hufvudstadsbladet}}</ref> Others have suggested that the name derives from the Swedish word {{Lang|sv|helsing}}, an archaic form of the word {{Lang|sv|hals}} ('[[neck]]'), which refers to the narrowest part of a river, the [[rapids]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Utbildning & Vetenskap: Svenskfinland |url=http://veta.yle.fi/svenskfinland/artikel.php?id=23&subject=mellannyland |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080512081641/http://veta.yle.fi/svenskfinland/artikel.php?id=23&subject=mellannyland |archive-date=12 May 2008 |access-date=8 July 2009 |publisher=Veta.yle.fi}}</ref> Other Scandinavian towns in similar geographical locations were given similar names at the time, such as [[Helsingør]] in Denmark and [[Helsingborg]] in Sweden.


When a town was founded in the village of [[Koskela|Forsby]] (later {{Lang|fi|Koskela}}) in 1548, it was called {{Lang|fi|Helsinge fors}}, 'Helsinge rapids'. The name refers to the {{ill|Vanhankaupunginkoski|fi|Vanhankaupunginkoski}} rapids at the mouth of the river.<ref>{{cite web |last=<!--Not stated--> |title=Onko kosken alkuperäinen nimi Helsinginkoski vai Vanhankaupunginkoski? |url=http://www.helsinginkoski.fi/kysymyksetjavastaukset/onko-kosken-alkuperainen-nimi-helsinginkoski-vai-vanhankaupunginkoski/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305220022/http://www.helsinginkoski.fi/kysymyksetjavastaukset/onko-kosken-alkuperainen-nimi-helsinginkoski-vai-vanhankaupunginkoski/ |archive-date=5 March 2016 |access-date=26 February 2016 |website=Helsinginkoski}}</ref> The town was commonly known as {{Lang|fi|Helsinge}} or {{Lang|fi|Helsing}}, from which the modern Finnish name is derived.<ref>{{cite web |last=Jäppinen |first=Jere |date=2007 |title=Helsingin nimi |url=http://www.helsinginkaupunginmuseo.fi/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/sofia_2_2007.pdf |access-date=26 February 2016 |website=www.helsinginkaupunginmuseo.fi |publisher=Helsingin kaupunginmuseo}}</ref>
When a town was founded in the village of [[Koskela|Forsby]] (later {{Lang|fi|Koskela}}) in 1548, it was called {{Lang|fi|Helsinge fors}}, 'Helsinge rapids'. The name refers to the {{ill|Vanhankaupunginkoski|fi|Vanhankaupunginkoski}} rapids at the mouth of the river.<ref>{{cite web |last=<!--Not stated--> |title=Onko kosken alkuperäinen nimi Helsinginkoski vai Vanhankaupunginkoski? |trans-title=Is the original name of the rapids Helsinginkoski or Vanhankaupunginkoski? |url=http://www.helsinginkoski.fi/kysymyksetjavastaukset/onko-kosken-alkuperainen-nimi-helsinginkoski-vai-vanhankaupunginkoski/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305220022/http://www.helsinginkoski.fi/kysymyksetjavastaukset/onko-kosken-alkuperainen-nimi-helsinginkoski-vai-vanhankaupunginkoski/ |archive-date=5 March 2016 |access-date=26 February 2016 |website=Helsinginkoski |language=fi}}</ref> The town was commonly known as {{Lang|fi|Helsinge}} or {{Lang|fi|Helsing}}, from which the modern Finnish name is derived.<ref>{{cite web |last=Jäppinen |first=Jere |date=2007 |title=Helsingin nimi |url=http://www.helsinginkaupunginmuseo.fi/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/sofia_2_2007.pdf |access-date=26 February 2016 |website=www.helsinginkaupunginmuseo.fi |publisher=Helsingin kaupunginmuseo}}</ref>


Official [[Council of State (Finland)|Finnish government]] documents and Finnish language newspapers have used the name ''Helsinki'' since 1819, when the [[Senate of Finland]] moved to the city from [[Turku]], the former capital of Finland. Decrees issued in Helsinki were dated with Helsinki as the place of issue. This is how the form Helsinki came to be used in [[literary language|written]] Finnish.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jäppinen |first=Jere |date=15 November 2011 |title=Mistä Helsingin nimi on peräisin? |url=http://www.hs.fi/paivanlehti/arkisto/Mist%C3%A4+Helsingin+nimi+on+per%C3%A4isin/aaHS20111115SI1AT02exp?src=haku&ref=arkisto%2F |journal=Helsingin Sanomat |pages=D2 |access-date=29 November 2013 |archive-date=29 November 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141129184056/http://www.hs.fi/paivanlehti/arkisto/Mist%C3%A4+Helsingin+nimi+on+per%C3%A4isin/aaHS20111115SI1AT02exp?src=haku&ref=arkisto%2F }}</ref> When Finland became the Grand Duchy of Finland, an autonomous state under the rule of the [[Russian Empire]], Helsinki was known as {{Transliteration|ru|Gel'singfors}} ({{Lang|ru|Гельсингфорс}}) in Russian, because the main and official language of Grand Duchy of Finland was Swedish.
Official [[Council of State (Finland)|Finnish government]] documents and Finnish language newspapers have used the name ''Helsinki'' since 1819, when the [[Senate of Finland]] moved to the city from [[Turku]], the former capital of Finland. Decrees issued in Helsinki were dated with Helsinki as the place of issue. This is how the form Helsinki came to be used in [[literary language|written]] Finnish.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jäppinen |first=Jere |date=15 November 2011 |title=Mistä Helsingin nimi on peräisin? |trans-title=Where does the name Helsinki come from? |url=http://www.hs.fi/paivanlehti/arkisto/Mist%C3%A4+Helsingin+nimi+on+per%C3%A4isin/aaHS20111115SI1AT02exp?src=haku&ref=arkisto%2F |journal=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi |pages=D2 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141129184056/http://www.hs.fi/paivanlehti/arkisto/Mist%C3%A4+Helsingin+nimi+on+per%C3%A4isin/aaHS20111115SI1AT02exp?src=haku&ref=arkisto%2F |archive-date=29 November 2014 |access-date=29 November 2013}}</ref> When Finland became the Grand Duchy of Finland, an autonomous state under the rule of the [[Russian Empire]], Helsinki was known as {{Transliteration|ru|Gel'singfors}} ({{Lang|ru|Гельсингфорс}}) in Russian, because the main and official language of the Grand Duchy of Finland was Swedish.


In [[Helsinki slang]], the city is called {{Lang|fi|Stadi}} (from the Swedish word {{Lang|sv|stad}}, meaning 'city'). Abbreviated form {{Lang|fi|Hesa}} is equally common, but its use is associated with people of rural origin ("junantuomat", lit. "brought by a train") and frowned upon by locals.<ref name="nickname" /><ref>Ristkari, Maiju: ''Heinäsorsat Helsingissä''. ''[[Aku Ankka]]'' #44/2013, introduction on page 2.</ref> {{lang|se|Helsset}} is the [[Northern Sami]] name for Helsinki.<ref name="samigrammar">{{cite web |title=Sami Grammar |url=http://people.uta.fi/~km56049/same/svocab.html |access-date=2 January 2015 |website=uta.fi |archive-date=21 December 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141221121024/http://people.uta.fi/~km56049/same/svocab.html }}</ref>
In [[Helsinki slang]], the city is called {{Lang|fi|Stadi}} (from the Swedish word {{Lang|sv|stad}}, meaning 'city'). Abbreviated form {{Lang|fi|Hesa}} is equally common, but its use is associated with people of rural origin ("junantuomat", lit. "brought by a train") and frowned upon by locals.<ref name="nickname" /><ref>Ristkari, Maiju: ''Heinäsorsat Helsingissä''. ''[[Aku Ankka]]'' #44/2013, introduction on page 2.</ref> {{lang|se|Helsset}} is the [[Northern Sami]] name for Helsinki.<ref name="samigrammar">{{cite web |title=Sami Grammar |url=http://people.uta.fi/~km56049/same/svocab.html |access-date=2 January 2015 |website=uta.fi |archive-date=21 December 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141221121024/http://people.uta.fi/~km56049/same/svocab.html }}</ref>
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After the end of the [[Last Glacial Period|Ice Age]] and the retreat of the ice sheet, the first settlers arrived in the Helsinki area around 5000 BC. Their presence has been documented by archaeologists in [[Vantaa]], [[Pitäjänmäki]] and [[Kaarela]].<ref name="NKent">{{Cite book |first=Neil |last=Kent |title=Helsinki: A cultural and literary history |publisher=Signal Books |year=2004 |location=Oxford}}</ref> Permanent settlements did not appear until the beginning of the 1st millennium AD, during the [[Iron Age]], when the area was inhabited by the [[Tavastians]]. They used the area for fishing and hunting, but due to the lack of archaeological finds it is difficult to say how extensive their settlements were. [[Palynology|Pollen analysis]] has shown that there were agricultural settlements in the area in the 10th century, and surviving historical records from the 14th century describe Tavastian settlements in the area.<ref name=":0">{{cite web |last=V.-P. Suhonen and Janne Heinonen |title=Helsingin keskiaikaiset ja uuden ajan alun kylänpaikat 2011, Inventointiraportti. Museovirasto, Arkeologiset kenttäpalvelut |url=https://www.hel.fi/hel2/kaumuseo/rakennusinventoinnit/raportit/kyl_paikkainventointi.pdf}}</ref>
After the end of the [[Last Glacial Period|Ice Age]] and the retreat of the ice sheet, the first settlers arrived in the Helsinki area around 5000 BC. Their presence has been documented by archaeologists in [[Vantaa]], [[Pitäjänmäki]] and [[Kaarela]].<ref name="NKent">{{Cite book |first=Neil |last=Kent |title=Helsinki: A cultural and literary history |publisher=Signal Books |year=2004 |location=Oxford}}</ref> Permanent settlements did not appear until the beginning of the 1st millennium AD, during the [[Iron Age]], when the area was inhabited by the [[Tavastians]]. They used the area for fishing and hunting, but due to the lack of archaeological finds it is difficult to say how extensive their settlements were. [[Palynology|Pollen analysis]] has shown that there were agricultural settlements in the area in the 10th century, and surviving historical records from the 14th century describe Tavastian settlements in the area.<ref name=":0">{{cite web |last=V.-P. Suhonen and Janne Heinonen |title=Helsingin keskiaikaiset ja uuden ajan alun kylänpaikat 2011, Inventointiraportti. Museovirasto, Arkeologiset kenttäpalvelut |url=https://www.hel.fi/hel2/kaumuseo/rakennusinventoinnit/raportit/kyl_paikkainventointi.pdf}}</ref>


[[Christianity]] does not gain a significant foothold in Finland before the 11th century. After that, a number of [[Christian cross|crosses]] and other objects related to Christianity can be found in archaeological material. According to the traditional view, the [[Kingdom of Sweden (800–1521)|Kingdom of Sweden]] made three crusades to Finland, thanks to which the region was incorporated into both Christianity and the Swedish Empire. Recent research has shown that these expeditions, to the extent that there were even three of them, were not the crusades that had been imagined. Later, the conquest of Finland was justified in terms of "civilisation" and "christianisation", and the myth of the Crusades was developed. It is more likely that it was a multidimensional combination of economic, cultural and political power ambitions.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-04 |title=Keskiaikainen Helsingin pitäjä {{!}} Historia Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/alkujuuret-ja-perustaminen/keskiaikainen-helsingin-pitaja |access-date=2024-02-21 |website=historia.hel.fi |language=fi}}</ref>
[[Christianity]] does not gain a significant foothold in Finland before the 11th century. After that, a number of [[Christian cross|crosses]] and other objects related to Christianity can be found in archaeological material. According to the traditional view, the [[Kingdom of Sweden (800–1521)|Kingdom of Sweden]] made three crusades to Finland, thanks to which the region was incorporated into both Christianity and the Swedish Empire. Recent research has shown that these expeditions, to the extent that there were even three of them, were not the crusades that had been imagined. Later, the conquest of Finland was justified in terms of "civilisation" and "christianisation", and the myth of the Crusades was developed. It is more likely that it was a multidimensional combination of economic, cultural and political power ambitions.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-04 |title=Keskiaikainen Helsingin pitäjä {{!}} Historia Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/alkujuuret-ja-perustaminen/keskiaikainen-helsingin-pitaja |access-date=2024-02-21 |website=historia.hel.fi |language=fi |archive-date=13 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240213155859/https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/alkujuuret-ja-perustaminen/keskiaikainen-helsingin-pitaja |url-status=dead }}</ref>


The early settlements were raided by [[Vikings]] until 1008, and the [[Battle at Herdaler]] was a battle between the Norse Viking leader Olav Haraldsson (later King [[Olaf II of Norway]], also known as Saint Olaf) and local Finns at Herdaler (now [[Ingå]]), not far from Helsinga, around 1007–8.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Väätäinen |first=Erika |date=2022-03-04 |title=Were There Ever Vikings In Finland Or Finnish Vikings? |url=https://scandification.com/finnish-vikings-and-vikings-in-finland/ |access-date=2024-02-24 |website=Scandification |language=en-GB}}</ref> The [[Heimskringla|Saga of Olaf Haraldson]] tells how Olav raided the coasts of Finland and was almost killed in battle. He ran away in fear and after that the Vikings did not raid the coasts of Finland.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Battle of Herdaler |url=http://mcllibrary.org/Heimskringla/haraldson1.html | quote = Saga of Olaf Haraldson. See chapter 8: The Third Battle. }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Talvio |first=Tuukka |date=2002 |title= Suomen museo 2002 |location=Vammala |publisher= Suomen Muinaismuistoyhdistys |isbn=951-9057-47-1}}</ref>
The early settlements were raided by [[Vikings]] until 1008, and the [[Battle at Herdaler]] was a battle between the Norse Viking leader Olav Haraldsson (later King [[Olaf II of Norway]], also known as Saint Olaf) and local Finns at Herdaler (now [[Ingå]]), not far from Helsinga, around 1007–1008.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Väätäinen |first=Erika |date=2022-03-04 |title=Were There Ever Vikings In Finland Or Finnish Vikings? |url=https://scandification.com/finnish-vikings-and-vikings-in-finland/ |access-date=2024-02-24 |website=Scandification |language=en-GB}}</ref> The [[Heimskringla|Saga of Olaf Haraldson]] tells how Olav raided the coasts of Finland and was almost killed in battle. He ran away in fear and after that the Vikings did not raid the coasts of Finland.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Battle of Herdaler |url=http://mcllibrary.org/Heimskringla/haraldson1.html |quote=Saga of Olaf Haraldson. See chapter 8: The Third Battle. |access-date=24 February 2024 |archive-date=7 October 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241007102458/http://www.mcllibrary.org/Heimskringla/haraldson1.html |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Talvio |first=Tuukka |date=2002 |title= Suomen museo 2002 |location=Vammala |publisher= Suomen Muinaismuistoyhdistys |isbn=951-9057-47-1}}</ref>


Later the area was settled by Christians from Sweden. They came mainly from the Swedish coastal regions of [[Norrland]] and [[Hälsingland]], and their migration intensified around 1100.<ref name="NKent" />  The [[Swedish colonisation of Finland|Swedes permanently colonised]] the Helsinki region's coastline in the late 13th century, after the successful crusade to Finland that led to the defeat of the Tavastians.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tarkiainen |first=Kari |title=Ruotsin itämaa |publisher=Svenska litteratussällskapet i Finland |year=2010 |location=Helsinki |pages=122–125}}</ref><ref name=":0" />
Later the area was settled by Christians from Sweden. They came mainly from the Swedish coastal regions of [[Norrland]] and [[Hälsingland]], and their migration intensified around 1100.<ref name="NKent" />  The [[Swedish colonisation of Finland|Swedes permanently colonised]] the Helsinki region's coastline in the late 13th century, after the successful crusade to Finland that led to the defeat of the Tavastians.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tarkiainen |first=Kari |title=Ruotsin itämaa |publisher=Svenska litteratussällskapet i Finland |year=2010 |location=Helsinki |pages=122–125}}</ref><ref name=":0" />


In the Middle Ages, the Helsinki area was a landscape of small villages. Some of the old villages from the 1240s in the area of present-day Helsinki, such as [[Koskela]] and [[Töölö]], are now Helsinki districts, as are the rest of the 27 medieval villages. The area gradually became part of the Kingdom of Sweden and Christianity. [[King's Road (Finland)|Kuninkaantie]], or the "King's Road", ran through the area and two interesting medieval buildings were built here: {{ill|Vartiokylä hillfort|fi|Vartiokylän linnavuori}} in the 1380s and the [[Church of St. Lawrence, Vantaa|Church of St. Lawrence]] in 1455. In the Middle Ages, several thousand people lived in Helsinki's [[keep]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-04 |title=Keskiaikainen Helsingin pitäjä {{!}} Historia Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/alkujuuret-ja-perustaminen/keskiaikainen-helsingin-pitaja |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=historia.hel.fi |language=fi}}</ref>
In the Middle Ages, the Helsinki area was a landscape of small villages. Some of the old villages from the 1240s in the area of present-day Helsinki, such as [[Koskela]] and [[Töölö]], are now Helsinki districts, as are the rest of the 27 medieval villages. The area gradually became part of the Kingdom of Sweden and Christianity. [[King's Road (Finland)|Kuninkaantie]], or the "King's Road", ran through the area and two interesting medieval buildings were built here: {{ill|Vartiokylä hillfort|fi|Vartiokylän linnavuori}} in the 1380s and the [[Church of St. Lawrence, Vantaa|Church of St. Lawrence]] in 1455. In the Middle Ages, several thousand people lived in Helsinki's [[keep]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-04 |title=Keskiaikainen Helsingin pitäjä {{!}} Historia Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/alkujuuret-ja-perustaminen/keskiaikainen-helsingin-pitaja |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=historia.hel.fi |language=fi |archive-date=13 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240213155859/https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/alkujuuret-ja-perustaminen/keskiaikainen-helsingin-pitaja |url-status=dead }}</ref>


There was a lot of trade across the [[Baltic Sea]]. The shipping route to the coast, and especially to [[Reval]], meant that by the end of the Middle Ages the Helsinki region had become an important trading centre for wealthy [[peasant]]s, [[priest]]s and [[nobility|noble]]s in Finland, after [[Vyborg]] and [[Pohja]]. [[Fur]]s, [[wood]], [[tar]], [[fish]] and animals were exported from Helsinki, and [[salt]] and [[grain]] were brought to the fortress. Helsinki was also the most important cattle-breeding area in Uusimaa. With the help of trade, Helsinki became one of the wealthiest cities in Finland and Uusimaa. Thanks to trade and travel, e.g. to Reval, people could speak several languages, at least helpfully. Depending on the situation, Finnish, Swedish, Latin or Low German could be heard in the Helsinki area.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-11-16 |title=Keskiaikaista arkea Helsingin pitäjässä {{!}} Historia Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/ilmiot/arjen-muuttuvat-kasvot/keskiaikaista-arkea-helsingin-pitajassa |access-date=2024-02-15 |website=historia.hel.fi |language=fi}}</ref>
There was a lot of trade across the [[Baltic Sea]]. The shipping route to the coast, and especially to [[Reval]], meant that by the end of the Middle Ages the Helsinki region had become an important trading centre for wealthy [[peasant]]s, [[priest]]s and [[nobility|nobles]] in Finland, after [[Vyborg]] and [[Pohja]]. [[Fur]]s, [[wood]], [[tar]], [[fish]] and animals were exported from Helsinki, and [[salt]] and [[grain]] were brought to the fortress. Helsinki was also the most important cattle-breeding area in Uusimaa. With the help of trade, Helsinki became one of the wealthiest cities in Finland and Uusimaa. Thanks to trade and travel, e.g. to Reval, people could speak several languages, at least helpfully. Depending on the situation, Finnish, Swedish, Latin or Low German could be heard in the Helsinki area.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-11-16 |title=Keskiaikaista arkea Helsingin pitäjässä {{!}} Historia Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/ilmiot/arjen-muuttuvat-kasvot/keskiaikaista-arkea-helsingin-pitajassa |access-date=2024-02-15 |website=historia.hel.fi |language=fi}}</ref>


Written chronicles from 1417 mention the village of [[Koskela]] near the rapids at the mouth of the [[Vantaa River|River Vantaa]], where Helsinki was to be founded.<ref name="NKent" />
Written chronicles from 1417 mention the village of [[Koskela]] near the rapids at the mouth of the [[Vantaa River|River Vantaa]], where Helsinki was to be founded.<ref name="NKent" />
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Helsinki was founded by King [[Gustav I of Sweden]] on 12 June 1550 as a trading town called Helsingfors to rival the [[Hanseatic League|Hanseatic]] city of Reval (now [[Tallinn]]) on the southern shore of the [[Gulf of Finland]].<ref name="Tabblo100">{{cite web |title=Ruttopuisto&nbsp;– Plague Park |url=http://www.tabblo.com/studio/stories/view/409531/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411112934/http://www.tabblo.com/studio/stories/view/409531/ |archive-date=11 April 2008 |access-date=3 November 2008 |publisher=Tabblo.com}}</ref><ref name="NKent" /> To populate the new town at the mouth of the [[Vantaa River]], the king ordered the [[bourgeoisie]] of [[Porvoo]], [[Raseborg]], [[Rauma, Finland|Rauma]] and [[Ulvila]] to [[Forced displacement|move]] there.<ref name="helsinki-history">{{cite web |title=Helsingin historia |url=http://www.hel.fi/www/Helsinki/fi/kaupunki-ja-hallinto/tietoa-helsingista/helsingin-historia-ja-arkistot/ |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref> The shallowness of the bay made it impossible to build a harbour, and the king allowed the settlers to leave the unfortunate location. In 1640, Count [[Per Brahe the Younger]], together with some descendants of the original settlers, moved the centre of the city to the [[Vironniemi]] peninsula by the sea, today's [[Kruununhaka]] district, where the [[Senate Square, Helsinki|Senate Square]] and [[Helsinki Cathedral]] are located.<ref name="matkaoppaat"/>
Helsinki was founded by King [[Gustav I of Sweden]] on 12 June 1550 as a trading town called Helsingfors to rival the [[Hanseatic League|Hanseatic]] city of Reval (now [[Tallinn]]) on the southern shore of the [[Gulf of Finland]].<ref name="Tabblo100">{{cite web |title=Ruttopuisto&nbsp;– Plague Park |url=http://www.tabblo.com/studio/stories/view/409531/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411112934/http://www.tabblo.com/studio/stories/view/409531/ |archive-date=11 April 2008 |access-date=3 November 2008 |publisher=Tabblo.com}}</ref><ref name="NKent" /> To populate the new town at the mouth of the [[Vantaa River]], the king ordered the [[bourgeoisie]] of [[Porvoo]], [[Raseborg]], [[Rauma, Finland|Rauma]] and [[Ulvila]] to [[Forced displacement|move]] there.<ref name="helsinki-history">{{cite web |title=Helsingin historia |url=http://www.hel.fi/www/Helsinki/fi/kaupunki-ja-hallinto/tietoa-helsingista/helsingin-historia-ja-arkistot/ |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref> The shallowness of the bay made it impossible to build a harbour, and the king allowed the settlers to leave the unfortunate location. In 1640, Count [[Per Brahe the Younger]], together with some descendants of the original settlers, moved the centre of the city to the [[Vironniemi]] peninsula by the sea, today's [[Kruununhaka]] district, where the [[Senate Square, Helsinki|Senate Square]] and [[Helsinki Cathedral]] are located.<ref name="matkaoppaat"/>


During the second half of the 17th century, Helsinki, as a wooden city, suffered from regular [[fire]]s, and by the beginning of the 18th century the population had fallen below 1,700. For a long time Helsinki was mainly a small administrative town for the governors of [[Nyland and Tavastehus County]], but its importance began to grow in the 18th century when plans were made to build a more solid naval defence in front of the city.<ref name="helsinki-history"/> Little came of these plans, however, as Helsinki remained a small town plagued by poverty, war and disease. The [[Great Northern War plague outbreak|plague]] of 1710 killed most of Helsinki's population.<ref name="Tabblo100" /> After the [[Battle of Helsinki (1713)|Russians captured]] Helsinki in May 1713 during the [[Great Northern War]], the retreating Swedish administration set fire to parts of the city.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/tuho-ja-jalleenrakennus/suuri-pohjan-sota-ja-helsingin-tuho|title=Suuri Pohjan sota ja Helsingin tuho|date=21 January 2022 |publisher=City of Helsinki|access-date=10 May 2023|language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Seppo|last=Aalto|title=Kruununkaupunki – Vironniemen Helsinki 1640–1721|publisher=[[Finnish Literature Society]]|location=Helsinki|year=2015|isbn=978-952-222-675-4|language=fi}}</ref> Despite this, the city's population grew to 3,000 by the beginning of the 19th century. The construction of the naval fortress of [[Suomenlinna|Sveaborg]] (''Viapori'' in Finnish, now also called ''Suomenlinna'') in the 18th century helped to improve Helsinki's status. However, it wasn't until Russia defeated Sweden in the [[Finnish War]] and annexed Finland as the autonomous [[Grand Duchy of Finland]] in 1809 that the city began to develop into a substantial city. The Russians besieged the Sveaborg fortress during the war, and about a quarter of the city was destroyed in a fire in 1808.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Niukkanen |first1=Marianna |last2=Heikkinen, Markku |title=Vuoden 1808 suurpalo |url=http://www.nba.fi/helsinginarkeologiaa/keskusta_kohteet_1810.htm |access-date=14 July 2013 |website=Kurkistuksia Helsingin kujille |publisher=National Board of Antiquities |language=fi |archive-date=14 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171214210101/http://www.nba.fi/helsinginarkeologiaa/keskusta_kohteet_1810.htm }}</ref>
During the second half of the 17th century, Helsinki, as a wooden city, suffered from regular [[fire]]s, and by the beginning of the 18th century the population had fallen below 1,700. For a long time Helsinki was mainly a small administrative town for the governors of [[Nyland and Tavastehus County]], but its importance began to grow in the 18th century when plans were made to build a more solid naval defence in front of the city.<ref name="helsinki-history"/> Little came of these plans, however, as Helsinki remained a small town plagued by poverty, war and disease. The [[Great Northern War plague outbreak|plague]] of 1710 killed most of Helsinki's population.<ref name="Tabblo100" /> After the [[Battle of Helsinki (1713)|Russians captured]] Helsinki in May 1713 during the [[Great Northern War]], the retreating Swedish administration set fire to parts of the city.<ref>{{cite web |date=21 January 2022 |title=Suuri Pohjan sota ja Helsingin tuho |trans-title=The Great Northern War and the destruction of Helsinki |url=https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/tuho-ja-jalleenrakennus/suuri-pohjan-sota-ja-helsingin-tuho |access-date=10 May 2023 |publisher=City of Helsinki |language=fi |archive-date=10 May 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230510153729/https://historia.hel.fi/fi/kaannekohdat/tuho-ja-jalleenrakennus/suuri-pohjan-sota-ja-helsingin-tuho |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Seppo|last=Aalto|title=Kruununkaupunki – Vironniemen Helsinki 1640–1721|publisher=[[Finnish Literature Society]]|location=Helsinki|year=2015|isbn=978-952-222-675-4|language=fi}}</ref> Despite this, the city's population grew to 3,000 by the beginning of the 19th century. The construction of the naval fortress of [[Suomenlinna|Sveaborg]] (''Viapori'' in Finnish, now also called ''Suomenlinna'') in the 18th century helped to improve Helsinki's status. However, it wasn't until Russia defeated Sweden in the [[Finnish War]] and annexed Finland as the autonomous [[Grand Duchy of Finland]] in 1809 that the city began to develop into a substantial city. The Russians besieged the Sveaborg fortress during the war, and about a quarter of the city was destroyed in a fire in 1808.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Niukkanen |first1=Marianna |last2=Heikkinen, Markku |title=Vuoden 1808 suurpalo |url=http://www.nba.fi/helsinginarkeologiaa/keskusta_kohteet_1810.htm |access-date=14 July 2013 |website=Kurkistuksia Helsingin kujille |publisher=National Board of Antiquities |language=fi |archive-date=14 December 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171214210101/http://www.nba.fi/helsinginarkeologiaa/keskusta_kohteet_1810.htm }}</ref>


Emperor [[Alexander I of Russia]] moved the capital of Finland from [[Turku]] to Helsinki on 8 April 1812 to reduce Swedish influence in Finland and bring the capital closer to [[St Petersburg]].<ref>{{cite web |title=8 April 1812 Emperor Alexander I promotes Helsinki to the capital of the Grand Duchy. - Helsinki 200 years as capital |url=http://www.helsinki200.fi/en/helsinki-1812-2012/1812-emperor-alexander-i-promotes-helsinki-capital-grand-duchy/ |access-date=21 January 2016 |archive-date=10 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170810032003/http://www.helsinki200.fi/en/helsinki-1812-2012/1812-emperor-alexander-i-promotes-helsinki-capital-grand-duchy/ }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://yle.fi/news/3-5486170|title=Bicentennial of Helsinki as Finnish capital|work=[[Yle News]]|date=8 April 2012|access-date=8 April 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinkitimes.fi/finland/finland-news/domestic/1978-lobbying-for-helsinki-200-years-ago-2.html|title=Lobbying for Helsinki 200 years ago|work=[[Helsinki Times]]|date=19 April 2012|access-date=8 April 2022}}</ref> After the [[Great Fire of Turku]] in 1827, the [[Royal Academy of Turku]], the only university in the country at the time, was also moved to Helsinki and eventually became the modern University of Helsinki. The move consolidated the city's new role and helped set it on a path of continuous growth. This transformation is most evident in the city centre, which was rebuilt in the [[neoclassicism|neoclassical]] style to resemble St. Petersburg, largely according to a plan by the German-born architect [[Carl Ludvig Engel|C. L. Engel]]. As elsewhere, technological advances such as the railway and [[industrialisation]] were key factors in the city's growth.
Emperor [[Alexander I of Russia]] moved the capital of Finland from [[Turku]] to Helsinki on 8 April 1812 to reduce Swedish influence in Finland and bring the capital closer to [[St Petersburg]].<ref>{{cite web |title=8 April 1812 Emperor Alexander I promotes Helsinki to the capital of the Grand Duchy. - Helsinki 200 years as capital |url=http://www.helsinki200.fi/en/helsinki-1812-2012/1812-emperor-alexander-i-promotes-helsinki-capital-grand-duchy/ |access-date=21 January 2016 |archive-date=10 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170810032003/http://www.helsinki200.fi/en/helsinki-1812-2012/1812-emperor-alexander-i-promotes-helsinki-capital-grand-duchy/ }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://yle.fi/news/3-5486170|title=Bicentennial of Helsinki as Finnish capital|work=[[Yle News]]|date=8 April 2012|access-date=8 April 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinkitimes.fi/finland/finland-news/domestic/1978-lobbying-for-helsinki-200-years-ago-2.html|title=Lobbying for Helsinki 200 years ago|work=[[Helsinki Times]]|date=19 April 2012|access-date=8 April 2022}}</ref> After the [[Great Fire of Turku]] in 1827, the [[Royal Academy of Turku]], the only university in the country at the time, was also moved to Helsinki and eventually became the modern University of Helsinki. The move consolidated the city's new role and helped set it on a path of continuous growth. This transformation is most evident in the city centre, which was rebuilt in the [[neoclassicism|neoclassical]] style to resemble St. Petersburg, largely according to a plan by the German-born architect [[Carl Ludvig Engel|C. L. Engel]]. As elsewhere, technological advances such as the railway and [[industrialisation]] were key factors in the city's growth.
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===Twentieth century===
===Twentieth century===


By the 1910s, Helsinki's population was already over 100,000, and despite the turbulence of Finnish history in the first half of the 20th century, Helsinki continued to grow steadily. This included the [[Finnish Civil War]] and the [[Winter War]], both of which left their mark on the city. At the beginning of the 20th century, there were roughly equal numbers of Finnish and [[Swedish-speaking population of Finland|Swedish speakers]] in Helsinki; the majority of workers were Finnish-speaking. The local [[Helsinki slang]] (or ''stadin slangi'') developed among Finnish children and young people from the 1890s as a mixed Finnish-Swedish language, with influences from [[German language|German]] and [[Russian language|Russian]], and from the 1950s the slang began to become more Finnish.<ref>{{cite book| author=Marjo Vilkko | title=Suomi on ruotsalainen | chapter=Stadin slangi | pages=216–219 | location=Helsinki | publisher=[[Schildts & Söderströms]] | year=2014 | isbn=978-951-52-3419-3 | language = fi}}</ref> A landmark event was the [[1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympic Games]], which were held in Helsinki. Finland's rapid urbanisation in the 1970s, which occurred late compared to the rest of Europe, tripled the population of the metropolitan area, and the [[Helsinki Metro]] subway system was built.
By the 1910s, Helsinki's population was already over 100,000, and despite the turbulence of Finnish history in the first half of the 20th century, Helsinki continued to grow steadily. This included the [[Finnish Civil War]] and the [[Winter War]], both of which left their mark on the city. At the beginning of the 20th century, there were roughly equal numbers of Finnish and [[Swedish-speaking population of Finland|Swedish speakers]] in Helsinki; the majority of workers were Finnish-speaking. The local [[Helsinki slang]] (or ''stadin slangi'') developed among Finnish children and young people from the 1890s as a mixed Finnish-Swedish language, with influences from [[German language|German]] and [[Russian language|Russian]], and from the 1950s the slang began to become more Finnish.<ref>{{cite book| author=Marjo Vilkko | title=Suomi on ruotsalainen | chapter=Stadin slangi | pages=216–219 | location=Helsinki | publisher=[[Schildts & Söderströms]] | year=2014 | isbn=978-951-52-3419-3 | language = fi}}</ref> A landmark event was the [[1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympic Games]], which were held in Helsinki. Finland's rapid urbanisation in the 1970s, which occurred late compared to the rest of Europe, tripled the population of the metropolitan area, and the [[Helsinki Metro]] subway system was built and put into operation in 1982.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hel.fi/hki/HKL/en/About+HKL/History/History+of+metro+transport |title=Helsinki City Transport - About HKL - History - A brief history of the metro |publisher=Helsinki City Transport |date=19 March 2012 |access-date=21 September 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512153035/http://www.hel.fi/hki/HKL/en/About%2BHKL/History/History%2Bof%2Bmetro%2Btransport |archive-date=12 May 2015 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


{{wide image|Southern Helsinki panorama 2011-06-28 1.jpg|650px|A panoramic view over the southernmost districts of Helsinki from [[Hotel Torni]]. The [[Helsinki Old Church]] and its surrounding park are seen in the foreground, while the towers of [[St. John's Church, Helsinki|St. John's Church]] (near centre) and [[Mikael Agricola Church]] (right) can be seen in the middle distance, backdropped by the [[Gulf of Finland]].|100%|center}}
{{wide image|Southern Helsinki panorama 2011-06-28 1.jpg|650px|A panoramic view over the southernmost districts of Helsinki from [[Hotel Torni]]. The [[Helsinki Old Church]] and its surrounding park are seen in the foreground, while the towers of [[St. John's Church, Helsinki|St. John's Church]] (near centre) and [[Mikael Agricola Church]] (right) can be seen in the middle distance, backdropped by the [[Gulf of Finland]].|100%|center}}
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{{Main|Geography of Helsinki}}
{{Main|Geography of Helsinki}}


Known as the "Daughter of the Baltic"<ref name="nickname1">[https://europecharm.com/helsinki-the-daughter-of-the-baltic/] {{Dead link|date=June 2021|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> or the "Pearl of the Baltic",<ref name="nickname2">{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/my-helsinki/helsinki-pearl-of-the-baltic-sea|title=Helsinki, Pearl of the Baltic Sea|website=Myhelsinki.fi|access-date=16 December 2021|archive-date=17 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210517084823/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/my-helsinki/helsinki-pearl-of-the-baltic-sea|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hooniverse.com/the-white-pearl-of-the-baltic-sea-helsinki-deals-with-snow/|title=The White Pearl of the Baltic Sea – Helsinki Deals with Snow|website=Hooniverse.com|date=3 January 2013|access-date=16 December 2021}}</ref> Helsinki is located at the tip of a peninsula and on 315 islands. The city centre is located on a southern peninsula, ''Helsinginniemi'' ("Cape of Helsinki"), which is rarely referred to by its actual name, [[Vironniemi]] ("Cape of Estonia"). Population density is comparatively high in certain parts of downtown Helsinki, reaching {{convert|16494|PD/km2}} in the district of [[Kallio]],  overall Helsinki's population density is 3,147 per square kilometre. Outside the city centre, much of Helsinki consists of post-war suburbs separated by patches of forest. A narrow, {{convert|10|km}} long [[Central Park (Helsinki)|Helsinki Central Park]], which stretches from the city centre to Helsinki's northern border, is an important recreational area for residents. The City of Helsinki has about 11,000 boat [[Berth (moorings)|moorings]] and over {{convert|14,000|ha|acre mi2|abbr=off}} of marine fishing waters adjacent to the capital region. About 60 species of fish are found in this area, and recreational fishing is popular.
Known as the "Daughter of the Baltic"<ref name="nickname1">{{Cite web |url=https://europecharm.com/helsinki-the-daughter-of-the-baltic/ |title=Archived copy |access-date=23 March 2021 |archive-date=14 June 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210614044041/https://europecharm.com/helsinki-the-daughter-of-the-baltic/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> or the "Pearl of the Baltic",<ref name="nickname2">{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/my-helsinki/helsinki-pearl-of-the-baltic-sea|title=Helsinki, Pearl of the Baltic Sea|website=Myhelsinki.fi|access-date=16 December 2021|archive-date=17 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210517084823/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/my-helsinki/helsinki-pearl-of-the-baltic-sea|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://hooniverse.com/the-white-pearl-of-the-baltic-sea-helsinki-deals-with-snow/|title=The White Pearl of the Baltic Sea – Helsinki Deals with Snow|website=Hooniverse.com|date=3 January 2013|access-date=16 December 2021}}</ref> Helsinki is located at the tip of a peninsula and on 315 islands. The city centre is located on a southern peninsula, ''Helsinginniemi'' ("Cape of Helsinki"), which is rarely referred to by its actual name, [[Vironniemi]] ("Cape of Estonia"). Population density is comparatively high in certain parts of downtown Helsinki, reaching {{convert|16494|PD/km2}} in the district of [[Kallio]],  overall Helsinki's population density is 3,147 per square kilometre. Outside the city centre, much of Helsinki consists of post-war suburbs separated by patches of forest. A narrow, {{convert|10|km}} long [[Central Park (Helsinki)|Helsinki Central Park]], which stretches from the city centre to Helsinki's northern border, is an important recreational area for residents. The City of Helsinki has about 11,000 boat [[Berth (moorings)|moorings]] and over {{convert|14,000|ha|acre mi2|abbr=off}} of marine fishing waters adjacent to the capital region. About 60 species of fish are found in this area, and recreational fishing is popular.


Helsinki's main islands include [[Seurasaari]], [[Lauttasaari]] and [[Korkeasaari]] – the latter is home to Finland's largest zoo, [[Korkeasaari Zoo]]. The former military islands of [[Vallisaari]] and [[Isosaari]] are now open to the public, but [[Santahamina]] is still in military use. The most historic and remarkable island is the fortress of [[Suomenlinna]] (Sveaborg).<ref name="36h"/> The island of [[Pihlajasaari]] is a popular summer resort, comparable to [[Fire Island]] in [[New York City]].
Helsinki's main islands include [[Seurasaari]], [[Lauttasaari]] and [[Korkeasaari]] – the latter is home to Finland's largest zoo, [[Korkeasaari Zoo]]. The former military islands of [[Vallisaari]] and [[Isosaari]] are now open to the public, but [[Santahamina]] is still in military use. The most historic and remarkable island is the fortress of [[Suomenlinna]] (Sveaborg).<ref name="36h"/> The island of [[Pihlajasaari]] is a popular summer resort, comparable to [[Fire Island]] in [[New York City]].
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There are 60 [[nature reserve]]s in Helsinki with a total area of {{convert|95480|acre|ha}}. Of the total area, {{convert|48190|acre|ha}} are water areas and {{convert|47290|acre|ha}} are land areas. The city also has seven nature reserves in [[Espoo]], [[Sipoo]], [[Hanko, Finland|Hanko]] and [[Ingå]]. The largest nature reserve is the [[Vanhankaupunginselkä]], with an area of {{convert|30600|acre|ha}}. The city's first nature reserve, Tiiraluoto of Lauttasaari, was established in 1948.<ref>{{cite magazine| last= Kotka |first=Tiina | title= Stadilla on 60 luonnonsuojelualuetta | magazine= Helsinki-lehti | date= 14 May 2020 | number= 2/2020 | page= 27 | publisher= City of Helsinki | url= https://www.hel.fi/static/liitteet/kanslia/helsinki-info/arkisto/2020/HKI0220_nettilehti_1505.pdf | language= fi | access-date= 30 December 2020}}</ref>
There are 60 [[nature reserve]]s in Helsinki with a total area of {{convert|95480|acre|ha}}. Of the total area, {{convert|48190|acre|ha}} are water areas and {{convert|47290|acre|ha}} are land areas. The city also has seven nature reserves in [[Espoo]], [[Sipoo]], [[Hanko, Finland|Hanko]] and [[Ingå]]. The largest nature reserve is the [[Vanhankaupunginselkä]], with an area of {{convert|30600|acre|ha}}. The city's first nature reserve, Tiiraluoto of Lauttasaari, was established in 1948.<ref>{{cite magazine| last= Kotka |first=Tiina | title= Stadilla on 60 luonnonsuojelualuetta | magazine= Helsinki-lehti | date= 14 May 2020 | number= 2/2020 | page= 27 | publisher= City of Helsinki | url= https://www.hel.fi/static/liitteet/kanslia/helsinki-info/arkisto/2020/HKI0220_nettilehti_1505.pdf | language= fi | access-date= 30 December 2020}}</ref>


Helsinki's official plant is the [[Norway maple]] and its official animal is the [[red squirrel]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.kirjastot.fi/kysy/arkistohaku/kysymys/?ID=4cb7bd80-f847-49dc-a6c9-020fc91899c2 | title=Mitkä ovat Helsingin nimikkoeläin ja nimikkokasvi? | work=Kysy kirjastonhoitajalta | publisher=Helsinki City Library | date=30 August 2001 | access-date= 30 December 2020 | language= fi}}</ref>
Helsinki's official plant is the [[Norway maple]] and its official animal is the [[red squirrel]].<ref>{{cite web |date=30 August 2001 |title=Mitkä ovat Helsingin nimikkoeläin ja nimikkokasvi? |trans-title=What are Helsinki’s official animal and plant? |url=http://www.kirjastot.fi/kysy/arkistohaku/kysymys/?ID=4cb7bd80-f847-49dc-a6c9-020fc91899c2 |access-date=30 December 2020 |work=Kysy kirjastonhoitajalta |publisher=Helsinki City Library |language=fi}}</ref>


===Metropolitan area===
===Metropolitan area===
{{Main|Helsinki capital region|Helsinki metropolitan area}}
{{Main|Helsinki capital region|Helsinki metropolitan area|Helsinki urban area}}
[[File:Greater Helsinki Urban Area.svg|thumb|right|[[Helsinki urban area|Helsinki central urban area]], an officially recognized [[Urban areas in Finland|urban area]]]]
[[File:Greater Helsinki Urban Area.svg|thumb|right|[[Helsinki urban area|Helsinki central urban area]], an officially recognized [[Urban areas in Finland|urban area]]]]
[[File:A map of the Capital region and Greater Helsinki in Finland.svg|thumb|right|A map of Helsinki's capital region (in orange) and [[Helsinki metropolitan area|its sub-regional municipalities]] (in light orange)]]
[[File:A map of the Capital region and Greater Helsinki in Finland.svg|thumb|right|A map of Helsinki's capital region (in orange) and [[Helsinki metropolitan area|its sub-regional municipalities]] (in light orange)]]
The [[Helsinki capital region]] ({{langx|fi|Pääkaupunkiseutu}}, {{langx|sv|Huvudstadsregionen}}) comprises four municipalities: Helsinki, [[Espoo]], [[Vantaa]], and [[Kauniainen]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Aluejaot |url=http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/tietopalvelut/uusimaa-tietopankki/aluejaot |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140529172146/http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/tietopalvelut/uusimaa-tietopankki/aluejaot |archive-date=29 May 2014 |access-date=29 May 2014 |website=Tietopalvelu |publisher=Uudenmaan liitto |language=fi}}</ref> The [[Helsinki urban area]] is considered to be the only [[metropolis]] in [[Finland]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Uudenmaan maakuntakaava selostus |url=http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/files/1090/Uudenmaan_maakuntakaava_selostus.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110813050316/http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/files/1090/Uudenmaan_maakuntakaava_selostus.pdf |archive-date=13 August 2011 |access-date=17 February 2014 |publisher=Helsinki-Uusimaa Region |language=fi}}</ref> It has a population of about {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}}) /1000000 round 2 }}}} million, and is the most densely populated area of [[Finland]]. The Capital Region spreads over a land area of {{convert|770|km2}} and has a population density of 1,619 per km². With over 20 percent of the country's population in just 0.2 percent of its surface area, the area's housing density is high by Finnish standards.
The [[Helsinki capital region]] ({{langx|fi|Pääkaupunkiseutu}}, {{langx|sv|Huvudstadsregionen}}) comprises four municipalities: Helsinki, [[Espoo]], [[Vantaa]], and [[Kauniainen]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Aluejaot |url=http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/tietopalvelut/uusimaa-tietopankki/aluejaot |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140529172146/http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/tietopalvelut/uusimaa-tietopankki/aluejaot |archive-date=29 May 2014 |access-date=29 May 2014 |website=Tietopalvelu |publisher=Uudenmaan liitto |language=fi}}</ref> The [[Helsinki urban area]] is considered to be the only [[metropolis]] in [[Finland]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Uudenmaan maakuntakaava selostus |url=http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/files/1090/Uudenmaan_maakuntakaava_selostus.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110813050316/http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/files/1090/Uudenmaan_maakuntakaava_selostus.pdf |archive-date=13 August 2011 |access-date=17 February 2014 |publisher=Helsinki-Uusimaa Region |language=fi}}</ref> It has a population of about {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}}) /1000000 round 2 }}}} million, and is the most densely populated area of [[Finland]]. The Capital Region spreads over a land area of {{convert|770|km2}} and has a population density of 1,619 per km². With over 20 percent of the country's population in just 0.2 percent of its surface area, the area's housing density is high by Finnish standards.


The [[Helsinki metropolitan area]] or the Greater Helsinki consists of the cities of the capital region and ten surrounding municipalities: [[Hyvinkää]], [[Järvenpää]], [[Kerava]], [[Kirkkonummi]], [[Nurmijärvi]], [[Sipoo]], [[Tuusula]], [[Pornainen]], [[Mäntsälä]] and [[Vihti]].<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.kielitoimistonohjepankki.fi/ohje/403 | title= Pääkaupunkiseutu, Suur-Helsinki ja Helsingin seutu | work= Kotus | access-date= 30 December 2020 | language= fi}}</ref> The Metropolitan Area covers {{convert|3697|km2|0|abbr=out}} and has a population of about {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Mäntsälä}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Pornainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kirkkonummi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vihti}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Nurmijärvi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Hyvinkää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Tuusula}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kerava}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Järvenpää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Sipoo}}) /1000000 round 2 }} }} million, or about a fourth of the total population of Finland. The metropolitan area has a high concentration of employment: approximately 750,000 jobs.<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin seutu tiivistetysti |url=http://www.helsinginseutu.fi/hki/HS/Helsingin+Seutu/Kaupunkitieto+ja+tilastot |website=Kaupunkitieto |date=19 December 2022 |publisher=Helsinginseutu.fi |language=fi}}</ref> Despite the intensity of land use, the region also has large recreational areas and green spaces. The Helsinki metropolitan area is the world's northernmost urban area with a population of over one million people, and the northernmost EU capital city.
The [[Helsinki metropolitan area]] or the Greater Helsinki consists of the cities of the capital region and ten surrounding municipalities: [[Hyvinkää]], [[Järvenpää]], [[Kerava]], [[Kirkkonummi]], [[Nurmijärvi]], [[Sipoo]], [[Tuusula]], [[Pornainen]], [[Mäntsälä]] and [[Vihti]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Pääkaupunkiseutu, Suur-Helsinki ja Helsingin seutu |trans-title=The Capital Region, Greater Helsinki, and the Helsinki Region |url=http://www.kielitoimistonohjepankki.fi/ohje/403 |access-date=30 December 2020 |work=Kotus |language=fi}}</ref> The Metropolitan Area covers {{convert|3697|km2|0|abbr=out}} and has a population of about {{formatnum: {{#expr: ({{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Mäntsälä}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Pornainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kirkkonummi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vihti}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Nurmijärvi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Hyvinkää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Tuusula}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kerava}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Järvenpää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Sipoo}}) /1000000 round 2 }} }} million, or about a fourth of the total population of Finland. The metropolitan area has a high concentration of employment: approximately 750,000 jobs.<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin seutu tiivistetysti |url=http://www.helsinginseutu.fi/hki/HS/Helsingin+Seutu/Kaupunkitieto+ja+tilastot |website=Kaupunkitieto |date=19 December 2022 |publisher=Helsinginseutu.fi |language=fi}}</ref> Despite the intensity of land use, the region also has large recreational areas and green spaces. The Helsinki metropolitan area is the world's northernmost urban area with a population of over one million people, and the northernmost EU capital city.


The [[Helsinki urban area]] is an officially recognized [[Urban areas in Finland|urban area in Finland]], defined by its population density. The area stretches throughout 11 municipalities, and is the largest such area in Finland, with a land area of {{convert|669.31|km2}} and approximately 1.36 &nbsp;million inhabitants.
The [[Helsinki urban area]] is an officially recognized [[Urban areas in Finland|urban area in Finland]], defined by its population density. The area stretches throughout 11 municipalities, and is the largest such area in Finland, with a land area of {{convert|669.31|km2}} and approximately 1.36 million inhabitants.


===Climate===
===Climate===
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| year rain days =  
| year rain days =  
| unit rain days = 0.1 mm
| unit rain days = 0.1 mm
| Jan humidity = 89.8
| Feb humidity = 88.3
| Mar humidity = 81.9
| Apr humidity = 73.2
| May humidity = 67.7
| Jun humidity = 70.1
| Jul humidity = 74.7
| Aug humidity = 79.5
| Sep humidity = 84.0
| Oct humidity = 87.1
| Nov humidity = 90.7
| Dec humidity = 90.4
|Jan sun = 37.2
|Jan sun = 37.2
|Feb sun = 70.6
|Feb sun = 70.6
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| source 1 = FMI climatological normals for Finland 1991&ndash;2020,<ref name="FMI">{{cite web |title=FMI normals 1991-2020 |url=https://www.ilmatieteenlaitos.fi/ilmastollinen-vertailukausi |access-date=7 October 2021|publisher=fmi.fi}}</ref> record highs and lows<ref name="FMI data">{{cite web |title=FMI data |url=http://suja.kapsi.fi/fmi-tilastot.php?taulukkomoodi=true |access-date=25 September 2020 |publisher=FMI}}</ref>
| source 1 = FMI climatological normals for Finland 1991&ndash;2020,<ref name="FMI">{{cite web |title=FMI normals 1991-2020 |url=https://www.ilmatieteenlaitos.fi/ilmastollinen-vertailukausi |access-date=7 October 2021|publisher=fmi.fi}}</ref> record highs and lows<ref name="FMI data">{{cite web |title=FMI data |url=http://suja.kapsi.fi/fmi-tilastot.php?taulukkomoodi=true |access-date=25 September 2020 |publisher=FMI}}</ref>
| date = September 2020
| date = September 2020
|source 2 = Weather Atlas (sun data)<ref name="Weather Atlas">{{cite web |url=https://www.weather-atlas.com/en/finland/helsinki-climate |title=Helsinki, Finland - Monthly weather forecast and Climate data |publisher=Weather Atlas |access-date=22 May 2023 }}</ref>}}
|source 2 = Weather Atlas (sun data),<ref name="Weather Atlas">{{cite web |url=https://www.weather-atlas.com/en/finland/helsinki-climate |title=Helsinki, Finland - Monthly weather forecast and Climate data |publisher=Weather Atlas |access-date=22 May 2023 }}</ref> Weather.Directory<ref name="Weather.Directory">
{{cite web|url=https://weather.directory/fi/helsinki
|title= Helsinki Weather & Climate Guide
|access-date= 7 Sep 2025
|website= Weather.Directory}}</ref>}}


{{Weather box
{{Weather box
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| metric first = Yes
| metric first = Yes
| single line = Yes
| single line = Yes
| collapsed = y
| Jan record high C = 8.2
| Jan record high C = 8.2
| Feb record high C = 10.0
| Feb record high C = 10.0
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| Apr record high C = 24.0
| Apr record high C = 24.0
| May record high C = 29.6
| May record high C = 29.6
| Jun record high C = 31.4
| Jun record high C = 31.7
| Jul record high C = 33.7
| Jul record high C = 33.7
| Aug record high C = 31.5
| Aug record high C = 31.5
| Sep record high C = 27.7
| Sep record high C = 27.7
| Oct record high C = 18.2
| Oct record high C = 18.2
| Nov record high C = 13.4
| Nov record high C = 13.7
| Dec record high C = 10.8
| Dec record high C = 10.8
| year record high C =  
| year record high C =  
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| year snow days = 121.6
| year snow days = 121.6
| source 1 = FMI climatological normals for Finland 1991-2020<ref name="FMI"/> Weatheronline.co.uk<ref name="Weatheronline.co.uk">{{cite web|url=https://www.weatheronline.co.uk/weather/maps/city?FMM=1&FYY=1991&LMM=12&LYY=2020&WMO=02974&CONT=euro&REGION=0004&LAND=FI&ART=SNT&R=0&NOREGION=1&LEVEL=162&LANG=en&MOD=tab|title=Weatheronline.co.uk}}</ref>
| source 1 = FMI climatological normals for Finland 1991-2020<ref name="FMI"/> Weatheronline.co.uk<ref name="Weatheronline.co.uk">{{cite web|url=https://www.weatheronline.co.uk/weather/maps/city?FMM=1&FYY=1991&LMM=12&LYY=2020&WMO=02974&CONT=euro&REGION=0004&LAND=FI&ART=SNT&R=0&NOREGION=1&LEVEL=162&LANG=en&MOD=tab|title=Weatheronline.co.uk}}</ref>
| source 2 = record highs and lows<ref name="FMI open data">{{cite web |title=FMI open data |url=https://www.ilmatieteenlaitos.fi/ilmastollinen-vertailukausi |access-date=19 May 2025 |publisher=FMI}}</ref>
| source 2 = record highs and lows<ref name="FMI open data">{{cite web |title=FMI open data |url=https://www.ilmatieteenlaitos.fi/ilmastollinen-vertailukausi |access-date=5 September 2025 |publisher=FMI}}</ref>
| date = October 2021
| date = October 2021
| source =  
| source =  
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===Neighbourhoods and other subdivisions===
===Neighbourhoods and other subdivisions===
{{Main|Subdivisions of Helsinki}}
{{Main|Subdivisions of Helsinki}}
Helsinki is divided into three major areas: [[Helsinki City Centre]] ({{langx|fi|Helsingin kantakaupunki}}, {{langx|sv|Helsingfors innerstad}}), [[North Helsinki]] ({{langx|fi|Pohjois-Helsinki}}, {{langx|sv|Norra Helsingfors}}) and [[East Helsinki]] ({{langx|fi|Itä-Helsinki}}, {{langx|sv|Östra Helsingfors}}). Of these, Helsinki City Centre means the undefined core area of capital, as opposed to [[suburb]]s. The designations [[Central business district|business center]] and city center usually refer to [[Kluuvi]], [[Kamppi]] and [[Punavuori]].<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.hel.fi/www/Helsinki/fi/kaupunki-ja-hallinto/hallinto/kaupunginosat/kamppi-kluuvi-punavuori | title=Kamppi, Kluuvi ja Punavuori | work = City of Helsinki | access-date=30 December 2020 | language= fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.pienimatkaopas.com/helsinki/majoittuminen.html | title= Millainen hotelli Helsingissä kannattaa valita ja miltä alueelta | work= Pieni matkaopas | access-date=30 December 2020 | language= fi}}</ref> Other subdivisional centers outside the downtown area include [[Malmi, Helsinki|Malmi]] ({{langx|sv|Malm}}),<ref>[https://www.uuttahelsinkia.fi/fi/malmi Malmi] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220922055351/https://www.uuttahelsinkia.fi/fi/malmi |date=22 September 2022 }}, Uuttahelsinkiä.fi, (in Finnish)</ref><ref>[https://www.sttinfo.fi/tiedote/malmin-keskustan-suunnitteluperiaatteet-paatoksentekoon?publisherId=60577852&releaseId=69910578 Malmin keskustan suunnitteluperiaatteet päätöksentekoon – STT Info] (in Finnish)</ref> located in the northeastern part of city, and [[Itäkeskus]] ({{langx|sv|Östra centrum}}),<ref>[https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-11632410 Tässä on tuleva Itä-Helsingin keskus: Itäväylän päälle rakentuu taloja ja tilaa kaikille, Stoan Puhoksen ja Puotilan metroaseman alueen monikulttuurisuutta halutaan rikastaa] – ''[[Yle]]'' (in Finnish)</ref> in the eastern part of city.
Helsinki is divided into three major areas: [[Helsinki City Centre]] ({{langx|fi|Helsingin kantakaupunki}}, {{langx|sv|Helsingfors innerstad}}), [[North Helsinki]] ({{langx|fi|Pohjois-Helsinki}}, {{langx|sv|Norra Helsingfors}}) and [[East Helsinki]] ({{langx|fi|Itä-Helsinki}}, {{langx|sv|Östra Helsingfors}}). Of these, Helsinki City Centre means the undefined core area of capital, as opposed to [[suburb]]s. The designations [[Central business district|business center]] and city center usually refer to [[Kluuvi]], [[Kamppi]] and [[Punavuori]].<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.hel.fi/www/Helsinki/fi/kaupunki-ja-hallinto/hallinto/kaupunginosat/kamppi-kluuvi-punavuori | title=Kamppi, Kluuvi ja Punavuori | work = City of Helsinki | access-date=30 December 2020 | language= fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Millainen hotelli Helsingissä kannattaa valita ja miltä alueelta |trans-title=What kind of hotel should you choose in Helsinki, and in which area? |url=http://www.pienimatkaopas.com/helsinki/majoittuminen.html |access-date=30 December 2020 |work=Pieni matkaopas |language=fi}}</ref> Other subdivisional centers outside the downtown area include [[Malmi, Helsinki|Malmi]] ({{langx|sv|Malm}}),<ref>[https://www.uuttahelsinkia.fi/fi/malmi Malmi] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220922055351/https://www.uuttahelsinkia.fi/fi/malmi |date=22 September 2022 }}, Uuttahelsinkiä.fi, (in Finnish)</ref><ref>[https://www.sttinfo.fi/tiedote/malmin-keskustan-suunnitteluperiaatteet-paatoksentekoon?publisherId=60577852&releaseId=69910578 Malmin keskustan suunnitteluperiaatteet päätöksentekoon – STT Info] [Planning principles for Malmi's town center to be decided upon] (in Finnish)</ref> located in the northeastern part of city, and [[Itäkeskus]] ({{langx|sv|Östra centrum}}),<ref>[https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-11632410 Tässä on tuleva Itä-Helsingin keskus: Itäväylän päälle rakentuu taloja ja tilaa kaikille, Stoan Puhoksen ja Puotilan metroaseman alueen monikulttuurisuutta halutaan rikastaa] [This is the future center of East Helsinki: buildings and spaces for everyone will be built over Itäväylä, and the multicultural character of the Stoa–Puhos–Puotila metro station area is to be enriched] – ''[[Yle]]'' (in Finnish)</ref> in the eastern part of city.


==Cityscape==
==Cityscape==
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[[File:West side of Helsinki Cathedral in Kruununhaka, Helsinki, Finland, 2022 April.jpg|thumb|right|[[Helsinki Cathedral]] is among the most prominent buildings in the city]]
[[File:West side of Helsinki Cathedral in Kruununhaka, Helsinki, Finland, 2022 April.jpg|thumb|right|[[Helsinki Cathedral]] is among the most prominent buildings in the city]]
[[File:Hotel Kämp by Night in Winter - panoramio.jpg|thumb|[[Hotel Kämp]], a luxury hotel in Helsinki, located in [[Kluuvi]]]]
[[File:Hotel Kämp by Night in Winter - panoramio.jpg|thumb|[[Hotel Kämp]], a luxury hotel in Helsinki, located in [[Kluuvi]]]]
[[Carl Ludvig Engel]], appointed to plan a new city centre on his own, designed several [[Neoclassical architecture|neoclassical]] buildings in Helsinki. The focal point of Engel's city plan was the [[Helsinki Senate Square|Senate Square]]. It is surrounded by the [[Government Palace (Finland)|Government Palace]] (to the east), the main building of Helsinki University (to the west), and (to the north) the large [[Helsinki Cathedral]], which was finished in 1852, twelve years after Engel's death. Helsinki's [[epithet]], "The White City of the North", derives from this construction era. Most of Helsinki's older buildings were built after the 1808 fire; before that time, the oldest surviving building in the center of Helsinki is the {{ill|Sederholm House|fr|Maison Sederholm}} (1757) at the intersection of Senate Square and the Katariinankatu street.<ref name="matkaoppaat">{{cite web| url=http://matkaoppaat.com/helsinki/ | title=Helsinki – Suomi | website=Matkaoppaat.com | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref> Suomenlinna also has buildings completed in the 18th century, including the [[Kuninkaanportti]] on the {{ill|Kustaanmiekka|fr|Kustaanmiekka|lt=Kustaanmiekka Island}} (1753–1754).<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.suomenlinna.fi/kavijalle/nahtavyydet/kuninkaanportti/ | title=Kuninkaanportti | work=Suomenlinna | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref> The oldest church in Helsinki is the Östersundom church, built in 1754.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Vuonna 1754 rakennettu Östersundomin kirkko on Helsingin vanhin kirkko |url=https://www.helsinginseurakunnat.fi/ostersundominhautausmaa/artikkelit/chpmocf43 |access-date=2024-02-12 |website=Helsingin seurakunnat |language=fi}}</ref>
[[Carl Ludvig Engel]], appointed to plan a new city centre on his own, designed several [[Neoclassical architecture|neoclassical]] buildings in Helsinki. The focal point of Engel's city plan was the [[Helsinki Senate Square|Senate Square]]. It is surrounded by the [[Government Palace (Finland)|Government Palace]] (to the east), the main building of Helsinki University (to the west), and (to the north) the large [[Helsinki Cathedral]], which was finished in 1852, twelve years after Engel's death. Helsinki's [[epithet]], "The White City of the North", derives from this construction era. Most of Helsinki's older buildings were built after the 1808 fire; before that time, the oldest surviving building in the center of Helsinki is the [[Sederholm House]] (1757) at the intersection of Senate Square and the Katariinankatu street.<ref name="matkaoppaat">{{cite web| url=http://matkaoppaat.com/helsinki/ | title=Helsinki – Suomi | website=Matkaoppaat.com | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref> Suomenlinna also has buildings completed in the 18th century, including the [[Kuninkaanportti]] on the [[Kustaanmiekka|Kustaanmiekka Island]] (1753–1754).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.suomenlinna.fi/kavijalle/nahtavyydet/kuninkaanportti/ | title=Kuninkaanportti | work=Suomenlinna | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi | archive-date=19 March 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112607/https://www.suomenlinna.fi/kavijalle/nahtavyydet/kuninkaanportti/ | url-status=dead }}</ref> The oldest church in Helsinki is the Östersundom church, built in 1754.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Vuonna 1754 rakennettu Östersundomin kirkko on Helsingin vanhin kirkko |trans-title=The Östersundom Church, built in 1754, is the oldest church in Helsinki |url=https://www.helsinginseurakunnat.fi/ostersundominhautausmaa/artikkelit/chpmocf43 |access-date=2024-02-12 |website=Helsingin seurakunnat |language=fi}}</ref>


Helsinki is also home to numerous [[Art Nouveau]]-influenced ([[Jugendstil|Jugend]] in Finnish) buildings belonging to the Kansallisromantiikka ([[romantic nationalism]]) trend, designed in the early 20th century and strongly influenced by ''[[Kalevala]]'', which was a common theme of the era. Helsinki's Art Nouveau style is also featured in central residential districts, such as [[Katajanokka]] and [[Ullanlinna]].<ref>{{cite news| url= http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/25/greathomesanddestinations/25iht-rehelsinki25.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0 | title=In Helsinki, Modern Units to Art Nouveau Gems | work = [[The New York Times]] | date=24 January 2013 | access-date =22 October 2021 | last1=Colston | first1=Penelope }}</ref> An important architect of the Finnish Art Nouveau style was [[Eliel Saarinen]], whose architectural masterpiece was the [[Helsinki Central railway station|Helsinki Central Station]]. Opposite the [[Bank of Finland]] building is the [[Renaissance Revival architecture|Renaissance Revivalish]] the [[House of the Estates]] (1891).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.virtualhelsinki.net/info/page_object.php?obj_id=60 | title=Säätytalo | work=Virtual Helsinki | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi | archive-date=14 September 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120914034744/http://www.virtualhelsinki.net/info/page_object.php?obj_id=60 }}</ref>
Helsinki is also home to numerous [[Art Nouveau]]-influenced ([[Jugendstil|Jugend]] in Finnish) buildings belonging to the Kansallisromantiikka ([[romantic nationalism]]) trend, designed in the early 20th century and strongly influenced by ''[[Kalevala]]'', which was a common theme of the era. Helsinki's Art Nouveau style is also featured in central residential districts, such as [[Katajanokka]] and [[Ullanlinna]].<ref>{{cite news| url= http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/25/greathomesanddestinations/25iht-rehelsinki25.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0 | title=In Helsinki, Modern Units to Art Nouveau Gems | work = [[The New York Times]] | date=24 January 2013 | access-date =22 October 2021 | last1=Colston | first1=Penelope }}</ref> An important architect of the Finnish Art Nouveau style was [[Eliel Saarinen]], whose architectural masterpiece was the [[Helsinki Central railway station|Helsinki Central Station]]. Opposite the [[Bank of Finland]] building is the [[Renaissance Revival architecture|Renaissance Revivalish]] the [[House of the Estates]] (1891).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.virtualhelsinki.net/info/page_object.php?obj_id=60 | title=Säätytalo | work=Virtual Helsinki | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi | archive-date=14 September 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120914034744/http://www.virtualhelsinki.net/info/page_object.php?obj_id=60 }}</ref>
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The only visible public buildings of the [[Gothic Revival architecture]] in Helsinki are [[St. John's Church, Helsinki|St. John's Church]] (1891) in Ullanlinna, which is the largest stone church in Finland, and its twin towers rise to 74 meters and have 2,600 seats.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.helsinginkirkot.fi/fi/kirkot/johanneksenkirkko | title= Johanneksenkirkko | work= Helsingin kirkot | access-date= 29 December 2020 | language= fi | archive-date= 4 August 2017 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170804095812/http://www.helsinginkirkot.fi/fi/kirkot/johanneksenkirkko }}</ref> Other examples of neo-Gothic include the [[House of Nobility (Finland)|House of Nobility]] in [[Kruununhaka]] and the [[Catholic]] [[St. Henry's Cathedral]].<ref>{{cite web | url= https://hkm.finna.fi/Record/hkm.HKMS000005%3A00000tio | title= Ritarihuone | work= Helsingin kaupunginmuseo | access-date= 29 December 2020 | language= fi | archive-date= 19 March 2021 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112618/https://hkm.finna.fi/Record/hkm.HKMS000005%3A00000tio }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.discoveringfinland.com/fi/travel/nae-koe/nahtavyydet-kulttuuri/monumentit/katedraalit/ | title= Katedraalit ja tuomiokirkot | work = Discovering finland | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref>
The only visible public buildings of the [[Gothic Revival architecture]] in Helsinki are [[St. John's Church, Helsinki|St. John's Church]] (1891) in Ullanlinna, which is the largest stone church in Finland, and its twin towers rise to 74 meters and have 2,600 seats.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.helsinginkirkot.fi/fi/kirkot/johanneksenkirkko | title= Johanneksenkirkko | work= Helsingin kirkot | access-date= 29 December 2020 | language= fi | archive-date= 4 August 2017 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170804095812/http://www.helsinginkirkot.fi/fi/kirkot/johanneksenkirkko }}</ref> Other examples of neo-Gothic include the [[House of Nobility (Finland)|House of Nobility]] in [[Kruununhaka]] and the [[Catholic]] [[St. Henry's Cathedral]].<ref>{{cite web | url= https://hkm.finna.fi/Record/hkm.HKMS000005%3A00000tio | title= Ritarihuone | work= Helsingin kaupunginmuseo | access-date= 29 December 2020 | language= fi | archive-date= 19 March 2021 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112618/https://hkm.finna.fi/Record/hkm.HKMS000005%3A00000tio }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.discoveringfinland.com/fi/travel/nae-koe/nahtavyydet-kulttuuri/monumentit/katedraalit/ | title= Katedraalit ja tuomiokirkot | work = Discovering finland | access-date=29 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref>


In addition to other cities in Northern Europe that were not under the [[Soviet Union]], such as [[Stockholm]], Sweden, Helsinki's neoclassical buildings gained also popularity as a backdrop for scenes intended to depict the Soviet Union in numerous Hollywood movies during the [[Cold War]] era, when filming within the actual USSR was not possible. Some of them, including ''[[The Kremlin Letter]]'' (1970), ''[[Reds (film)|Reds]]'' (1981), and ''[[Gorky Park (film)|Gorky Park]]'' (1983).<ref>{{cite journal |last=Willis |first=David K. |date=4 August 1983 |title=When it comes to films on Russia, they've seen enough |url=http://www.csmonitor.com/1983/0804/080464.html |journal=Christian Science Monitor}}</ref> was possible due to such Russian cities as [[Leningrad]] and [[Moscow]] also having similar neoclassical architecture. At the same time due to [[Cold War]] and Finnish relations with the USSR the government secretly instructed Finnish officials not to extend assistance to such film projects.<ref name="mtv3erittainsalainen">Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland, Political Department: {{cite web |title=Memo 56 of 20 January 1982 (labelled highly confidential in 1982) |url=http://img.mtv3.fi/mn_liitteet/mtv3/uutiset/bulleting/300538.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070615135412/http://img.mtv3.fi/mn_liitteet/mtv3/uutiset/bulleting/300538.pdf |archive-date=15 June 2007 |access-date=16 January 2007}}&nbsp;{{small|(1.37&nbsp;MB)}}</ref> There are some films where Helsinki has been represented on its own in films, most notably the 1967 British-American [[espionage film|espionage]] [[Thriller film|thriller]] ''[[Billion Dollar Brain]]'', starring [[Michael Caine]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Billion Dollar Brain - Film Locations |url=https://www.movie-locations.com/movies/b/Billion-Dollar-Brain.php |access-date=15 July 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=YLE: Tehtävä Suomessa, Michael Caine! - YLE Teema |date=18 February 2020 |url=https://yle.fi/aihe/artikkeli/2020/02/18/tehtava-suomessa-michael-caine |access-date=15 July 2020 |language=fi}}</ref> The city has large amounts of underground areas such as shelters and tunnels, many used daily as swimming pool, church, water management, entertainment etc.<ref>{{cite web |last=Morris |first=Kieran |title=Deeper Underground: How Helsinki is Building its Future Beneath the City Surface |url=https://theculturetrip.com/europe/finland/articles/deeper-underground-how-helsinki-is-building-its-future-beneath-the-city-surface/ |website=Culture Trip|date=6 May 2020 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Underground Master Plan |url=https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/en/housing/planning/current/underground-master-plan |website=Helsingin kaupunki |access-date=31 August 2020 |archive-date=19 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112613/https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/en/housing/planning/current/underground-master-plan }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=My Helsinki |url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/see-and-do/underground-helsinki |website=www.myhelsinki.fi |access-date=31 August 2020 |archive-date=19 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112619/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/see-and-do/underground-helsinki }}</ref><!-- + https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674775514000699 https://gigazine.net/gsc_news/en/20191228-underground-helsinki/ -->
In addition to other cities in Northern Europe that were not under the [[Soviet Union]], such as [[Stockholm]], Sweden, Helsinki's neoclassical buildings gained also popularity as a backdrop for scenes intended to depict the Soviet Union in numerous Hollywood movies during the [[Cold War]] era, when filming within the actual USSR was not possible. Some of them, including ''[[The Kremlin Letter]]'' (1970), ''[[Reds (film)|Reds]]'' (1981), and ''[[Gorky Park (film)|Gorky Park]]'' (1983).<ref>{{cite journal |last=Willis |first=David K. |date=4 August 1983 |title=When it comes to films on Russia, they've seen enough |url=https://www.csmonitor.com/1983/0804/080464.html |journal=Christian Science Monitor}}</ref> were possible due to such Russian cities as [[Leningrad]] and [[Moscow]] also having similar neoclassical architecture. At the same time due to [[Cold War]] and Finnish relations with the USSR the government secretly instructed Finnish officials not to extend assistance to such film projects.<ref name="mtv3erittainsalainen">Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland, Political Department: {{cite web |title=Memo 56 of 20 January 1982 (labelled highly confidential in 1982) |url=http://img.mtv3.fi/mn_liitteet/mtv3/uutiset/bulleting/300538.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070615135412/http://img.mtv3.fi/mn_liitteet/mtv3/uutiset/bulleting/300538.pdf |archive-date=15 June 2007 |access-date=16 January 2007}}&nbsp;{{small|(1.37&nbsp;MB)}}</ref> The city has large numbers of underground areas such as shelters and tunnels, many used daily as swimming pool, church, water management, entertainment etc.<ref>{{cite web |last=Morris |first=Kieran |title=Deeper Underground: How Helsinki is Building its Future Beneath the City Surface |url=https://theculturetrip.com/europe/finland/articles/deeper-underground-how-helsinki-is-building-its-future-beneath-the-city-surface/ |website=Culture Trip |date=6 May 2020 |access-date=31 August 2020 |archive-date=19 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112619/https://theculturetrip.com/europe/finland/articles/deeper-underground-how-helsinki-is-building-its-future-beneath-the-city-surface/ |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Underground Master Plan |url=https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/en/housing/planning/current/underground-master-plan |website=Helsingin kaupunki |access-date=31 August 2020 |archive-date=19 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112613/https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/en/housing/planning/current/underground-master-plan }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=My Helsinki |url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/see-and-do/underground-helsinki |website=www.myhelsinki.fi |access-date=31 August 2020 |archive-date=19 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112619/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/see-and-do/underground-helsinki }}</ref><!-- + https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674775514000699 https://gigazine.net/gsc_news/en/20191228-underground-helsinki/ -->


===Functionalism and modern architecture===
===Functionalism and modern architecture===
[[File:Aleksanterinkatu - January 2018.jpg|thumb|right|[[Aleksanterinkatu]] at Christmas time]]
[[File:Aleksanterinkatu - January 2018.jpg|thumb|right|[[Aleksanterinkatu]] at Christmas time]]
[[File:Oodi July 2019 2.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Helsinki Central Library Oodi|Oodi]] library is getting attention around the world.<ref name="36h"/>]]
[[File:Oodi July 2019 2.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Helsinki Central Library Oodi|Oodi]] library is getting attention around the world.<ref name="36h"/>]]
Helsinki also features several buildings by Finnish architect [[Alvar Aalto]],<ref name="36h">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/08/08/travel/things-to-do-helsinki.html|title=36 Hours in Helsinki|first=Ingrid K.|last=Williams|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=8 August 2024|access-date=12 August 2024}}</ref> recognized as one of the pioneers of architectural [[functionalism (architecture)|functionalism]]. However, some of his works, such as the headquarters of the paper company [[Stora Enso]] and the concert venue [[Finlandia Hall]], have been subject to divided opinions from the citizens.<ref>{{cite web |date=25 February 2007 |title=Stora Enson pääkonttori, Kanavaranta 1 |url=http://helsinginaallot.blogspot.com/2007/02/stora-enson-pkonttori-kanavaranta-1.html |access-date=5 February 2011 |website="Helsingin Aallot" blog |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=14 June 2008 |title=Kohtaako Enson konttori voittajansa? |language=fi |at=Lead editorial |work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |url=http://www.hs.fi/paakirjoitus/artikkeli/Kohtaako+Enson+konttori+voittajansa/HS20080614SI1MA01re3 |access-date=5 February 2011 |archive-date=19 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111119164352/http://www.hs.fi/paakirjoitus/artikkeli/Kohtaako+Enson+konttori+voittajansa/HS20080614SI1MA01re3 }}</ref><ref name="penttilä">{{cite web |last=Penttilä |first=Vappu |title=Kiasma nousi inhokkien ykköseksi |url=http://www2.hs.fi/extrat/kulttuuri/rakennukset/rakennukset_c2.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629165346/http://www2.hs.fi/extrat/kulttuuri/rakennukset/rakennukset_c2.html |archive-date=29 June 2011 |access-date=5 February 2011 |website=Verkkoliite |publisher=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |language=fi}}</ref>
Helsinki also features several buildings by Finnish architect [[Alvar Aalto]],<ref name="36h">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/08/08/travel/things-to-do-helsinki.html|title=36 Hours in Helsinki|first=Ingrid K.|last=Williams|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=8 August 2024|access-date=12 August 2024}}</ref> recognized as one of the pioneers of architectural [[functionalism (architecture)|functionalism]]. However, some of his works, such as the headquarters of the paper company [[Stora Enso]] and the concert venue [[Finlandia Hall]], have been subject to divided opinions from the citizens.<ref>{{cite web |date=25 February 2007 |title=Stora Enson pääkonttori, Kanavaranta 1 |url=http://helsinginaallot.blogspot.com/2007/02/stora-enson-pkonttori-kanavaranta-1.html |access-date=5 February 2011 |website="Helsingin Aallot" blog |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=14 June 2008 |title=Kohtaako Enson konttori voittajansa? |trans-title=Is Enso’s headquarters meeting its match? |url=http://www.hs.fi/paakirjoitus/artikkeli/Kohtaako+Enson+konttori+voittajansa/HS20080614SI1MA01re3 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111119164352/http://www.hs.fi/paakirjoitus/artikkeli/Kohtaako+Enson+konttori+voittajansa/HS20080614SI1MA01re3 |archive-date=19 November 2011 |access-date=5 February 2011 |work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |at=Lead editorial |language=fi}}</ref><ref name="penttilä">{{cite web |last=Penttilä |first=Vappu |title=Kiasma nousi inhokkien ykköseksi |trans-title=Kiasma rose to the top of the list of least liked |url=http://www2.hs.fi/extrat/kulttuuri/rakennukset/rakennukset_c2.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629165346/http://www2.hs.fi/extrat/kulttuuri/rakennukset/rakennukset_c2.html |archive-date=29 June 2011 |access-date=5 February 2011 |website=Verkkoliite |publisher=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |language=fi}}</ref>


Functionalist buildings in Helsinki by other architects include the [[Helsinki Olympic Stadium|Olympic Stadium]], the [[Tennispalatsi|Tennis Palace]], the [[Töölö Rowing Stadium|Rowing Stadium]], the [[Helsinki Swimming Stadium|Swimming Stadium]], the [[Helsinki Velodrome|Velodrome]], the [[Lasipalatsi|Glass Palace]], the [[Töölö Sports Hall]], and [[Helsinki-Malmi Airport]]. The sports venues were built to serve the 1940 Helsinki Olympic Games; the games were initially cancelled due to the [[Second World War]], but the venues fulfilled their purpose in the [[1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympic Games]]. Many of them are listed by [[DoCoMoMo]] as significant examples of modern architecture. [[Helsinki Olympic Stadium|The Olympic Stadium]] and [[Helsinki-Malmi Airport]] are also catalogued by the [[Finnish National Board of Antiquities|Finnish Heritage Agency]] as cultural-historical environments of national significance.<ref>{{Cite web |date=22 December 2009 |title=Olympiarakennukset |trans-title=Olympic Buildings |url=http://www.rky.fi/read/asp/r_kohde_det.aspx?KOHDE_ID=1575 |access-date=26 June 2022 |website=Finnish Heritage Agency List of Nationally Significant Built Cultural Environments (RKY)}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=22 December 2009 |title=Malmin Lentoasema |trans-title=Malmi Airport |url=http://www.rky.fi/read/asp/r_kohde_det.aspx?KOHDE_ID=1560 |access-date=26 June 2022 |website=Finnish Heritage Agency List of Nationally Significant Built Cultural Environments (RKY)}}</ref>
Functionalist buildings in Helsinki by other architects include the [[Helsinki Olympic Stadium|Olympic Stadium]], the [[Tennispalatsi|Tennis Palace]], the [[Töölö Rowing Stadium|Rowing Stadium]], the [[Helsinki Swimming Stadium|Swimming Stadium]], the [[Helsinki Velodrome|Velodrome]], the [[Lasipalatsi|Glass Palace]], the [[Töölö Sports Hall]], and [[Helsinki-Malmi Airport]]. The sports venues were built to serve the 1940 Helsinki Olympic Games; the games were initially cancelled due to the [[Second World War]], but the venues fulfilled their purpose in the [[1952 Summer Olympics|1952 Olympic Games]]. Many of them are listed by [[DoCoMoMo]] as significant examples of modern architecture. [[Helsinki Olympic Stadium|The Olympic Stadium]] and [[Helsinki-Malmi Airport]] are also catalogued by the [[Finnish National Board of Antiquities|Finnish Heritage Agency]] as cultural-historical environments of national significance.<ref>{{Cite web |date=22 December 2009 |title=Olympiarakennukset |trans-title=Olympic Buildings |url=http://www.rky.fi/read/asp/r_kohde_det.aspx?KOHDE_ID=1575 |access-date=26 June 2022 |website=Finnish Heritage Agency List of Nationally Significant Built Cultural Environments (RKY)}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=22 December 2009 |title=Malmin Lentoasema |trans-title=Malmi Airport |url=http://www.rky.fi/read/asp/r_kohde_det.aspx?KOHDE_ID=1560 |access-date=26 June 2022 |website=Finnish Heritage Agency List of Nationally Significant Built Cultural Environments (RKY)}}</ref> The [[Linnanmäki|Linnanmäki Amusement Park]], owned by the non-profit {{ill|Children's Day Foundation|fi|Lasten Päivän Säätiö}}, was opened in 1950.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.huvipuisto.net/uklintsi.html|title=Linnanmaki Amusement Park|website=Huvipuisto.net|access-date=18 July 2025}}</ref>


[[File:Kalasatama in Sörnäinen, Helsinki, Finland, 2023 September – 06.jpg|thumb|Residential towers of [[Kalasatama]]. The {{convert|134|m|adj=on|abbr=on}} [[Majakka]] has been built on top of the [[Redi (shopping centre)|Redi shopping centre]]. It is currently [[List of tallest buildings in Finland|Finland's tallest building]].]]
[[File:Kalasatama in Sörnäinen, Helsinki, Finland, 2023 September – 06.jpg|thumb|Residential towers of [[Kalasatama]]. The {{convert|134|m|adj=on|abbr=on}} [[Majakka]] has been built on top of the [[Redi (shopping centre)|Redi shopping centre]]. It is currently [[List of tallest buildings in Finland|Finland's tallest building]].]]
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When Finland became heavily urbanized in the 1960s and 1970s, the district of [[Pihlajamäki]], for example, was built in Helsinki for new residents, where for the first time in Finland, [[precast concrete]] was used on a large scale. [[Pikku Huopalahti]], built in the 1980s and 1990s, has tried to get rid of a one-size-fits-all grid pattern, which means that its look is very organic and its streets are not repeated in the same way. [[Itäkeskus]] in [[Eastern Helsinki]] was the first regional center in the 1980s.<ref name="ilonen">Ilonen, Arvi: Helsinki, Espoo, Kauniainen, Vantaa – arkkitehtuuriopas. Helsinki: Otava, 2009. {{ISBN|978-951-1-23193-6}}.</ref> Efforts have also been made to protect Helsinki in the late 20th century, and many old buildings have been renovated.<ref name="ilonen"/> [[Modern architecture]] is represented, for example, by the Museum of Contemporary Art [[Kiasma]],<ref name="36h"/> which consists of two straight and curved-walled parts, though this style strongly divided the opinions from the citizens.<ref name="penttilä"/> Next to Kiasma is the glass-walled [[Sanomatalo]] (1999).
When Finland became heavily urbanized in the 1960s and 1970s, the district of [[Pihlajamäki]], for example, was built in Helsinki for new residents, where for the first time in Finland, [[precast concrete]] was used on a large scale. [[Pikku Huopalahti]], built in the 1980s and 1990s, has tried to get rid of a one-size-fits-all grid pattern, which means that its look is very organic and its streets are not repeated in the same way. [[Itäkeskus]] in [[Eastern Helsinki]] was the first regional center in the 1980s.<ref name="ilonen">Ilonen, Arvi: Helsinki, Espoo, Kauniainen, Vantaa – arkkitehtuuriopas. Helsinki: Otava, 2009. {{ISBN|978-951-1-23193-6}}.</ref> Efforts have also been made to protect Helsinki in the late 20th century, and many old buildings have been renovated.<ref name="ilonen"/> [[Modern architecture]] is represented, for example, by the Museum of Contemporary Art [[Kiasma]],<ref name="36h"/> which consists of two straight and curved-walled parts, though this style strongly divided the opinions from the citizens.<ref name="penttilä"/> Next to Kiasma is the glass-walled [[Sanomatalo]] (1999).


There have been many plans to build highrise buildings in Helsinki since the 1920s when architect Eliel Saarinen proposed the 85-meter-tall Kalevalatalo in 1921, but few tall buildings were built until the 21st century.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Saarinen |first=Eliel |url=https://finna.fi/Record/mfa.5b0e8ef5-cd5f-4ced-90a0-0967a0fdb74a?lng=en-gb |title=Kalevalatalo, Munkkiniemi, Helsinki, ulkoperspektiivipiirustus, 1921}}</ref> In 1924 Oiva Kallio won Etu-Töölö competition with his plan (several 14- to 16-story buildings).<ref>{{Cite web |title=26.11.1927 Hakkapeliitta no 48, s. 11 |url=https://digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi/aikakausi/binding/1811962?page=11 |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi |language=fi}}</ref> A 32-story city hall was also proposed.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Pilvilinnoja – pöydälle jääneitä suunnitelmia |url=https://www.mfa.fi/kokoelmat/tietopaketit/pilvilinnoja-poydalle-jaaneita-suunnitelmia/ |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=Arkkitehtuurimuseo |language=fi}}</ref> Other plans of the 1930s included the 18-story "Kino" palace, a 17-story apartment building, and a 30-story<ref name="blog">{{Cite web |last=Murole|first=Pentti|date=7 April 2021 |title=Uskallanko kirjoittaa korkeasta rakentamisesta? |url=https://penttimurole.blogspot.com/2021/04/uskallanko-kirjoittaa-korkeasta.html |access-date=2024-03-08 |website=Pentti Murole blogi}}</ref> Stockmann building were proposed but only the 70-meter-tall 14-story [[Hotel Torni]] was built.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Etusivu - UTUPub |url=https://www.utupub.fi/ |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=www.utupub.fi}}</ref> (Hotel Torni was the tallest high-rise in Finland until 1976, when the 83-meter-tall [[Accountor Tower|Neste headquarters]] were completed in Espoo; Helsinki had rejected the tower.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Törmänen |first=Eeva |date=2022-12-17 |title=Suomen ensimmäinen pilvenpiirtäjä rakennettiin Espooseen 1976, koska Helsinki kieltäytyi – Raaden Hampaan rakentamiseen liittyi erikoinen vaatimus |url=https://www.tekniikkatalous.fi/uutiset/suomen-ensimmainen-pilvenpiirtaja-rakennettiin-espooseen-1976-koska-helsinki-kieltaytyi-raaden-hampaan-rakentamiseen-liittyi-erikoinen-vaatimus/d020f0eb-62df-4522-b977-d3130f358709 |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Tekniikka&Talous |language=fi}}</ref>) Twin 30-story buildings were proposed in [[Pasila]] in the 1970s but were rejected.<ref name="blog"/> In 1990 a planned 104-meter-tall tower<ref>{{Cite web |last=Pasanen |first=Esko |date=1990-11-08 |title=Koneen tornikaavailut hämmästyttävät Elmua |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000003026040.html |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |url-access=limited |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Pasanen |first=Esko |date=1990-12-19 |title=Kiinteistövirasto: Koneen korkea torni sopii Elmun tontille |url-access=limited |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000003036227.html |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> for the [[Kone]] company was also cancelled.
There have been many plans to build highrise buildings in Helsinki since the 1920s when architect Eliel Saarinen proposed the 85-meter-tall Kalevalatalo in 1921, but few tall buildings were built until the 21st century.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Saarinen |first=Eliel |url=https://finna.fi/Record/mfa.5b0e8ef5-cd5f-4ced-90a0-0967a0fdb74a?lng=en-gb |title=Kalevalatalo, Munkkiniemi, Helsinki, ulkoperspektiivipiirustus, 1921 |archive-date=13 February 2024 |access-date=13 February 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240213095440/https://finna.fi/Record/mfa.5b0e8ef5-cd5f-4ced-90a0-0967a0fdb74a?lng=en-gb |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 1924 Oiva Kallio won Etu-Töölö competition with his plan (several 14- to 16-story buildings).<ref>{{Cite web |title=26.11.1927 Hakkapeliitta no 48, s. 11 |url=https://digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi/aikakausi/binding/1811962?page=11 |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi |language=fi}}</ref> A 32-story city hall was also proposed.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Pilvilinnoja – pöydälle jääneitä suunnitelmia |trans-title=Castles in the sky – plans left on the table |url=https://www.mfa.fi/kokoelmat/tietopaketit/pilvilinnoja-poydalle-jaaneita-suunnitelmia/ |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=Arkkitehtuurimuseo |language=fi}}</ref> Other plans of the 1930s included the 18-story "Kino" palace, a 17-story apartment building, and a 30-story<ref name="blog">{{Cite web |last=Murole |first=Pentti |date=7 April 2021 |title=Uskallanko kirjoittaa korkeasta rakentamisesta? |trans-title=Do I dare to write about high-rise construction? |url=https://penttimurole.blogspot.com/2021/04/uskallanko-kirjoittaa-korkeasta.html |access-date=2024-03-08 |website=Pentti Murole blogi}}</ref> Stockmann building were proposed but only the 70-meter-tall 14-story [[Hotel Torni]] was built.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Etusivu - UTUPub |url=https://www.utupub.fi/ |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=www.utupub.fi}}</ref> (Hotel Torni was the tallest high-rise in Finland until 1976, when the 83-meter-tall [[Accountor Tower|Neste headquarters]] were completed in Espoo; Helsinki had rejected the tower.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Törmänen |first=Eeva |date=2022-12-17 |title=Suomen ensimmäinen pilvenpiirtäjä rakennettiin Espooseen 1976, koska Helsinki kieltäytyi – Raaden Hampaan rakentamiseen liittyi erikoinen vaatimus |trans-title=Finland's first skyscraper was built in Espoo in 1976 because Helsinki refused – The construction of 'Raade's Tooth' came with a strange requirement |url=https://www.tekniikkatalous.fi/uutiset/suomen-ensimmainen-pilvenpiirtaja-rakennettiin-espooseen-1976-koska-helsinki-kieltaytyi-raaden-hampaan-rakentamiseen-liittyi-erikoinen-vaatimus/d020f0eb-62df-4522-b977-d3130f358709 |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Tekniikka&Talous |language=fi}}</ref>) Twin 30-story buildings were proposed in [[Pasila]] in the 1970s but were rejected.<ref name="blog"/> In 1990 a planned 104-meter-tall tower<ref>{{Cite web |last=Pasanen |first=Esko |date=1990-11-08 |title=Koneen tornikaavailut hämmästyttävät Elmua |trans-title=Kone's tower plans astonish Elmu |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000003026040.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Pasanen |first=Esko |date=1990-12-19 |title=Kiinteistövirasto: Koneen korkea torni sopii Elmun tontille |trans-title=Real Estate Department: Kone’s tall tower is suitable for Elmu’s plot |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000003036227.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> for the [[Kone]] company was also cancelled.


Highrise construction only started in the beginning of the 21st century, when the city decided to allow the construction of skyscrapers. Highrises were first built in [[Kalasatama]], a primarily-residential district built on [[Sörnäinen Harbour|a former container port]]. As of 2024, four residential towers have been completed: the 35-story, 282-apartment, {{convert|134|m|ft|adj=mid|-tall}} {{lang|fi|[[Majakka]]|italic=unset}} in 2019 (which is the [[List of tallest buildings in Finland|tallest building in Finland]]); the 32-story, 124-meter {{lang|fi|Loisto|italic=unset}} in 2021; the 31-story, 120-meter {{lang|fi|Lumo|italic=unset}} One<!--this part isn't Finnish but is part of the name of the building--> in 2022; and the 24-story, 98-meter {{lang|fi|Visio|italic=unset}} in 2023. The 26-story, 111-meter-tall office building {{lang|fi|Horisontti|italic=unset}} is to be completed in 2025, and three further towers are to be built in the complex.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-03-03 |title=Eteläiseen Helsinkiin nousee jälleen uusi tornitalo, 111-metrinen toimistopilvenpiirtäjä |url=https://yle.fi/a/74-20020877 |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Yle Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-12-15 |title=Kalasataman harmaaksi haukutun Majakan viereen nousee kaksi valkoista tornitaloa – Poliitikot haluavat nähdä omin silmin, miltä talojen julkisivu näyttää |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000005933606.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-09-13 |title=Kalasatama |url=https://www.hel.fi/fi/kaupunkiymparisto-ja-liikenne/kaupunkisuunnittelu-ja-rakentaminen/uutta-helsinkia-rakentamassa/kalasatama |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref>
Highrise construction only started in the beginning of the 21st century, when the city decided to allow the construction of skyscrapers. Highrises were first built in [[Kalasatama]], a primarily-residential district built on [[Sörnäinen Harbour|a former container port]]. As of 2024, four residential towers have been completed: the 35-story, 282-apartment, {{convert|134|m|ft|adj=mid|-tall}} {{lang|fi|[[Majakka]]|italic=unset}} in 2019 (which is the [[List of tallest buildings in Finland|tallest building in Finland]]); the 32-story, 124-meter {{lang|fi|Loisto|italic=unset}} in 2021; the 31-story, 120-meter {{lang|fi|Lumo|italic=unset}} One<!--this part isn't Finnish but is part of the name of the building--> in 2022; and the 24-story, 98-meter {{lang|fi|Visio|italic=unset}} in 2023. The 26-story, 111-meter-tall office building {{lang|fi|Horisontti|italic=unset}} is to be completed in 2025, and three further towers are to be built in the complex.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-03-03 |title=Eteläiseen Helsinkiin nousee jälleen uusi tornitalo, 111-metrinen toimistopilvenpiirtäjä |trans-title=Another new tower is rising in southern Helsinki — a 111-meter office skyscraper |url=https://yle.fi/a/74-20020877 |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Yle Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-12-15 |title=Kalasataman harmaaksi haukutun Majakan viereen nousee kaksi valkoista tornitaloa – Poliitikot haluavat nähdä omin silmin, miltä talojen julkisivu näyttää |trans-title=Next to the Majakka tower in Kalasatama, often criticized as gray, two white high-rises are being built – Politicians want to see for themselves what the façades of the buildings look like |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000005933606.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-09-13 |title=Kalasatama |url=https://www.hel.fi/fi/kaupunkiymparisto-ja-liikenne/kaupunkisuunnittelu-ja-rakentaminen/uutta-helsinkia-rakentamassa/kalasatama |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref> Tall residential towers have also been built in the eastern district of [[Vuosaari]]: the 87-meter, 26-story [[Cirrus (Helsinki building)|Cirrus]] was completed in 2006, the 24-story, 85-meter-tall {{lang|fi|Hyperion|italic=unset}} was completed in 2023 and the 33-story, 288-apartment, 120-meter-tall {{lang|fi|Atlas|italic=unset}} is due to be completed in late 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Atlas ja Hyperion kurkottelevat pilviin |trans-title=Atlas and Hyperion reach for the skies |url=https://www.skanska.fi/tietoa-skanskasta/media/artikkelit/atlas-ja-hyperion-kurkottelevat-pilviin/ |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=www.skanska.fi |language=fi-FI}}</ref>
Tall residential towers have also been built in the eastern district of [[Vuosaari]]: the 87-meter, 26-story [[Cirrus (Helsinki building)|Cirrus]] was completed in 2006, the 24-story, 85-meter-tall {{lang|fi|Hyperion|italic=unset}} was completed in 2023 and the 33-story, 288-apartment, 120-meter-tall {{lang|fi|Atlas|italic=unset}} is due to be completed in late 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Atlas ja Hyperion kurkottelevat pilviin |url=https://www.skanska.fi/tietoa-skanskasta/media/artikkelit/atlas-ja-hyperion-kurkottelevat-pilviin/ |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=www.skanska.fi |language=fi-FI}}</ref>


Skyscrapers have also be planned in the Pasila area, with a handful of over-100-meter-tall towers in various stages of planning or early construction as of 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Senaatti-kiinteistöt, Helsingin kaupunki ja Skanska allekirjoittivat sopimuksen Pasilan Länsitornialueen toteuttamisesta {{!}} Skanska Oy |url=https://www.sttinfo.fi/tiedote/69995077/senaatti-kiinteistot-helsingin-kaupunki-ja-skanska-allekirjoittivat-sopimuksen-pasilan-lansitornialueen-toteuttamisesta?publisherId=69819623 |access-date=2024-02-09 |website=www.sttinfo.fi |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Siippainen |first=Aapo |date=2024-03-01 |title=130-metrisen tornitalon rakentaminen alkaa Pasilassa – vilkas pyöräbaana jää alle |url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/6599643 |access-date=2024-03-01 |website=Helsingin Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-04-12 |title=Pilvenpiirtäjät {{!}} Helsingin Pasilaa odottaa mullistus: Kuvissa uudet tornit |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000009514127.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-08-18 |title=Rakentaminen {{!}} Helsingin Messukeskus on saamassa uuden sisääntulohallin ja 33-kerroksisen hotellitornin |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000006606043.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Hotelli Tornitalo |url=https://kerrokantasi.hel.fi/trainfactory/tZADj96QZLzvBq1Nym9kuf8vE6DU6NiH}}</ref>
Skyscrapers have also be planned in the Pasila area, with a handful of over-100-meter-tall towers in various stages of planning or early construction as of 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Senaatti-kiinteistöt, Helsingin kaupunki ja Skanska allekirjoittivat sopimuksen Pasilan Länsitornialueen toteuttamisesta {{!}} Skanska Oy |trans-title=Senaatti Properties, the City of Helsinki, and Skanska signed an agreement on the development of the West Tower area in Pasila |url=https://www.sttinfo.fi/tiedote/69995077/senaatti-kiinteistot-helsingin-kaupunki-ja-skanska-allekirjoittivat-sopimuksen-pasilan-lansitornialueen-toteuttamisesta?publisherId=69819623 |access-date=2024-02-09 |website=www.sttinfo.fi |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Siippainen |first=Aapo |date=2024-03-01 |title=130-metrisen tornitalon rakentaminen alkaa Pasilassa – vilkas pyöräbaana jää alle |trans-title=Construction of a 130-meter high-rise begins in Pasila – a busy cycling route will go underneath |url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/6599643 |access-date=2024-03-01 |website=Helsingin Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-04-12 |title=Pilvenpiirtäjät {{!}} Helsingin Pasilaa odottaa mullistus: Kuvissa uudet tornit |trans-title=A transformation awaits Helsinki’s Pasila: New towers shown in images |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000009514127.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-08-18 |title=Rakentaminen {{!}} Helsingin Messukeskus on saamassa uuden sisääntulohallin ja 33-kerroksisen hotellitornin |trans-title=Helsinki's Messukeskus is set to get a new entrance hall and a 33-storey hotel tower |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000006606043.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Hotelli Tornitalo |url=https://kerrokantasi.hel.fi/trainfactory/tZADj96QZLzvBq1Nym9kuf8vE6DU6NiH}}</ref> In [[Jätkäsaari]], a 113-meter-tall hotel and a 24-story residential tower have been approved.<ref>{{Cite web |last=HS |first=Milka Valtanen |date=2019-06-19 |title=Jätkäsaareen nousemassa lähes 40 metriä Clarionia korkeampi tornihotelli |trans-title=A tower hotel nearly 40 meters taller than the Clarion is being built in Jätkäsaari |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000006148607.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> 121- and 93-meter-tall office buildings are planned to be built in [[Ruoholahti]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-02-06 |title=Kaupunkisuunnittelu {{!}} Helsinkiin halutaan uusi "tunnistettava maamerkki": 29-kerroksinen torni Ruoholahteen |trans-title=Helsinki wants a new 'recognizable landmark': a 29-storey tower for Ruoholahti |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000010206996.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> Well over 200 high-rise buildings will be built in Helsinki in the 2020s.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-04-26 |title=Kaavat, kartat ja avustukset rakentamiseen |trans-title=Zoning plans, maps, and subsidies for construction |url=https://www.hel.fi/fi/kaupunkiymparisto-ja-liikenne/tontit-ja-rakentamisen-luvat/kaavat-kartat-ja-avustukset-rakentamiseen |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref>{{Failed verification|date=July 2024|reason=Ref is the city's website with links to maps and plans for constructors, would probably need some sort of query (which was not given) or manual investigative work.}}
In [[Jätkäsaari]], a 113-meter-tall hotel and a 24-story residential tower have been approved.<ref>{{Cite web |last=HS |first=Milka Valtanen |date=2019-06-19 |title=Jätkäsaareen nousemassa lähes 40 metriä Clarionia korkeampi tornihotelli |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000006148607.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> 121- and 93-meter-tall office buildings are planned to be built in [[Ruoholahti]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-02-06 |title=Kaupunkisuunnittelu {{!}} Helsinkiin halutaan uusi "tunnistettava maamerkki": 29-kerroksinen torni Ruoholahteen |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000010206996.html |url-access=limited |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> Well over 200 high-rise buildings will be built in Helsinki in the 2020s.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-04-26 |title=Kaavat, kartat ja avustukset rakentamiseen |url=https://www.hel.fi/fi/kaupunkiymparisto-ja-liikenne/tontit-ja-rakentamisen-luvat/kaavat-kartat-ja-avustukset-rakentamiseen |access-date=2024-02-11 |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref>{{Failed verification|date=July 2024|reason=Ref is the city's website with links to maps and plans for constructors, would probably need some sort of query (which was not given) or manual investigative work.}}


The freshest building styles in Helsinki also include [[low-carbon economy]]; for example, the white-colored Katajanokan Laituri building that opened in [[Katajanokka]] in the summer of 2024 is built from Finnish and Swedish wood. This building includes eco-friendly hotel Solo Sokos Pier 4.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2024/dec/26/eco-friendly-helsinki-finland|title=On the waterfront in Helsinki – a zen regeneration game|first=Eddi|last=Fiegel|work=[[The Guardian]]|date=26 December 2024|access-date=27 December 2024}}</ref>
The freshest building styles in Helsinki also include [[low-carbon economy]]; for example, the white-colored Katajanokan Laituri building that opened in [[Katajanokka]] in the summer of 2024 is built from Finnish and Swedish wood. This building includes eco-friendly hotel Solo Sokos Pier 4.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2024/dec/26/eco-friendly-helsinki-finland|title=On the waterfront in Helsinki – a zen regeneration game|first=Eddi|last=Fiegel|work=[[The Guardian]]|date=26 December 2024|access-date=27 December 2024}}</ref>


===Statues and sculptures===
===Statues and sculptures===
[[File:11-07-29-helsinki-by-RalfR-149.jpg|thumb|upright|A [[Alexander II (statue in Helsinki)|statue]] of [[Alexander II of Russia]], the [[Grand Duke of Finland]], by [[Walter Runeberg]] and {{ill|Johannes Takanen|fi}} and erected in 1894. He was a well regarded [[emperor]] among the majority of [[Finns]] at the time.<ref>YLE: The statue of the Russian emperor arouses wonder among tourists – Why is it still in the middle of Helsinki? - [https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-10984227 Venäjän keisarin patsas herättää turisteissa ihmetystä – Miksi se on yhä keskellä Helsinkiä?] (in Finnish)</ref>]]
[[File:11-07-29-helsinki-by-RalfR-149.jpg|thumb|upright|A [[Alexander II (statue in Helsinki)|statue]] of [[Alexander II of Russia]], the [[Grand Duke of Finland]], by [[Walter Runeberg]] and {{ill|Johannes Takanen|fi}} and erected in 1894. He was a well regarded [[emperor]] among the majority of [[Finns]] at the time.<ref>[https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-10984227 Venäjän keisarin patsas herättää turisteissa ihmetystä – Miksi se on yhä keskellä Helsinkiä?] [The statue of the Russian emperor arouses wonder among tourists – Why is it still in the middle of Helsinki?] ''yle.fi'' (in Finnish)</ref>]]
Well-known statues and monuments strongly embedded in the cityscape of Helsinki include the [[Keisarinnankivi]] ("Stone of the Empress", 1835), the statue of Russian Emperor [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander II]] (1894), the fountain sculpture ''[[Havis Amanda]]'' (1908), the [[Paavo Nurmi statue]] (1925), the ''[[Three Smiths Statue]]'' (1932), the [[Aleksis Kivi Memorial]] (1939), the [[Eino Leino (statue)|Eino Leino Statue]] (1953), the [[Equestrian statue of Marshal Mannerheim]] (1960) and the ''[[Sibelius Monument (Helsinki)|Sibelius Monument]]'' (1967).<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.hamhelsinki.fi/veistokset/ | title = Veistokset | work = HAM Helsinki | publisher = Helsinki Art Museum | access-date = 27 January 2021 | language = fi | archive-date = 19 March 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112634/https://www.hamhelsinki.fi/julkinen-taide/ }}</ref>
Well-known statues and monuments strongly embedded in the cityscape of Helsinki include the [[Keisarinnankivi]] ("Stone of the Empress", 1835), the statue of Russian Emperor [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander II]] (1894), the fountain sculpture ''[[Havis Amanda]]'' (1908), the [[Paavo Nurmi statue]] (1925), the ''[[Three Smiths Statue]]'' (1932), the [[Aleksis Kivi Memorial]] (1939), the [[Eino Leino (statue)|Eino Leino Statue]] (1953), the [[Equestrian statue of Marshal Mannerheim]] (1960) and the ''[[Sibelius Monument (Helsinki)|Sibelius Monument]]'' (1967).<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.hamhelsinki.fi/veistokset/ | title = Veistokset | work = HAM Helsinki | publisher = Helsinki Art Museum | access-date = 27 January 2021 | language = fi | archive-date = 19 March 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210319112634/https://www.hamhelsinki.fi/julkinen-taide/ }}</ref>


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As is the case with all [[Municipalities of Finland|Finnish municipalities]], [[City Council of Helsinki|Helsinki's city council]] is the main decision-making organ in local politics, dealing with issues such as [[urban planning]], schools, health care, and [[public transport]]. The council is chosen in the nationally held [[Elections in Finland#Municipal elections|municipal elections]], which are held every four years.
As is the case with all [[Municipalities of Finland|Finnish municipalities]], [[City Council of Helsinki|Helsinki's city council]] is the main decision-making organ in local politics, dealing with issues such as [[urban planning]], schools, health care, and [[public transport]]. The council is chosen in the nationally held [[Elections in Finland#Municipal elections|municipal elections]], which are held every four years.


Helsinki's city council consists of eighty-five members. Following the most recent municipal elections in 2017, the three largest parties are the [[National Coalition Party]] (25), the [[Green League]] (21), and the [[Social Democratic Party of Finland|Social Democratic Party]] (12).<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin vaalipiiri&nbsp;— Tulospalvelu&nbsp;— Kuntavaalit 2012 |url=http://www.vaalikone.fi/kunta2012/tulos/01/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130101052243/http://www.vaalikone.fi/kunta2012/tulos/01/ |archive-date=1 January 2013 |access-date=12 March 2013 |publisher=Vaalikone.fi}}</ref>
Helsinki's city council consists of eighty-five members. Following the most recent municipal elections in 2025, the three largest parties are the [[National Coalition Party]] (21), the [[Social Democratic Party of Finland|Social Democratic Party]] (21), and the [[Green League]] (16).<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin vaalipiiri&nbsp;— Tulospalvelu&nbsp;— Kuntavaalit 2012 |url=http://www.vaalikone.fi/kunta2012/tulos/01/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130101052243/http://www.vaalikone.fi/kunta2012/tulos/01/ |archive-date=1 January 2013 |access-date=12 March 2013 |publisher=Vaalikone.fi}}</ref>


The Mayor of Helsinki is [[Juhana Vartiainen]].
The Mayor of Helsinki is [[Daniel Sazonov]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Ijäs |first=Johannes |date=2 June 2025 |title=Tässä on Helsingin uusi pormestari |trans-title=Here is Helsinki’s new mayor |url=https://www.iltalehti.fi/politiikka/a/9b7fc178-57bd-4462-9d41-00f4bb6c9cd8 |access-date=8 June 2025 |work=[[Iltalehti]] |language=fi}}</ref>


==Demographics==
==Demographics==
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The city of Helsinki has {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki }}}} inhabitants, making it the most populous municipality in Finland and the third in the [[Nordic countries|Nordics]].  The [[Helsinki metropolitan area|Helsinki region]] is the largest urbanised area in Finland with {{formatnum: {{#expr: {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Mäntsälä}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Pornainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kirkkonummi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vihti}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Nurmijärvi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Hyvinkää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Tuusula}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kerava}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Järvenpää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Sipoo}} }} }} inhabitants. The city of Helsinki is home to 12% of Finland's population. 20.8% of the population has a foreign background, which is twice above the national average. However, it is lower than in the major Finnish cities of [[Espoo]] or [[Vantaa]].<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final">{{cite web |url= https://stat.fi/en/publication/cm1jg8tr20lco07vwvoif9s6i |title= Number of foreign-language speakers exceeded 600,000 during 2024  |date= 2025-04-04 |series= Population structure |publisher= Statistics Finland |issn= 1797-5395  |access-date=2025-04-06 }}</ref>
The city of Helsinki has {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki }}}} inhabitants, making it the most populous municipality in Finland and the third in the [[Nordic countries|Nordics]].  The [[Helsinki metropolitan area|Helsinki region]] is the largest urbanised area in Finland with {{formatnum: {{#expr: {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Helsinki}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Espoo}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vantaa}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Mäntsälä}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Pornainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kauniainen}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kirkkonummi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Vihti}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Nurmijärvi}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Hyvinkää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Tuusula}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Kerava}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Järvenpää}} + {{Data Finland municipality/population count|Sipoo}} }} }} inhabitants. The city of Helsinki is home to 12% of Finland's population. 20.8% of the population has a foreign background, which is twice above the national average. However, it is lower than in the major Finnish cities of [[Espoo]] or [[Vantaa]].<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final">{{cite web |url= https://stat.fi/en/publication/cm1jg8tr20lco07vwvoif9s6i |title= Number of foreign-language speakers exceeded 600,000 during 2024  |date= 2025-04-04 |series= Population structure |publisher= Statistics Finland |issn= 1797-5395  |access-date=2025-04-06 }}</ref>


At 53 percent of the population, women form a greater proportion of Helsinki residents than the national average of 51 percent. Helsinki's population density of 3,147 people per square kilometre makes Helsinki the most densely-populated city in Finland. The life expectancy for men and women is slightly below the national averages: 75.1 years for men as compared to 75.7 years, 81.7 years for women as compared to 82.5 years.<ref>{{cite web |last=Tapani Valkonen ym. |date=17 December 2007 |title=Tutkimuksia 10/2007: Elinajanodotteen kehitys Helsingissä ja sen väestönosaryhmissä 1991–2005 |url=http://www.hel.fi/hel2/tietokeskus/julkaisut/pdf/07_12_17_tutk_10_Valkonen.pdf |access-date=30 December 2007 |publisher=Helsingin kaupunki, tietokeskus |archive-date=8 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220308095129/https://www.hel.fi/hel2/tietokeskus/julkaisut/pdf/07_12_17_tutk_10_valkonen.pdf }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Tilastolaitoksen historiaa |title=Tilasto |url=http://www.stat.fi/org/historia/elinajanodote.html |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Stat.fi |archive-date=24 April 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100424015724/http://www.stat.fi/org/historia/elinajanodote.html }}</ref>
At 53 percent of the population, women form a greater proportion of Helsinki residents than the national average of 51 percent. Helsinki's population density of 3,147 people per square kilometre makes Helsinki the most densely populated city in Finland. The life expectancy for men and women is slightly below the national averages: 75.1 years for men as compared to 75.7 years, 81.7 years for women as compared to 82.5 years.<ref>{{cite web |last=Tapani Valkonen ym. |date=17 December 2007 |title=Tutkimuksia 10/2007: Elinajanodotteen kehitys Helsingissä ja sen väestönosaryhmissä 1991–2005 |trans-title=Studies 10/2007: Life expectancy trends in Helsinki and its population subgroups, 1991–2005 |url=http://www.hel.fi/hel2/tietokeskus/julkaisut/pdf/07_12_17_tutk_10_Valkonen.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220308095129/https://www.hel.fi/hel2/tietokeskus/julkaisut/pdf/07_12_17_tutk_10_valkonen.pdf |archive-date=8 March 2022 |access-date=30 December 2007 |publisher=Helsingin kaupunki, tietokeskus}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Tilastolaitoksen historiaa |title=Tilasto |url=http://www.stat.fi/org/historia/elinajanodote.html |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Stat.fi |archive-date=24 April 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100424015724/http://www.stat.fi/org/historia/elinajanodote.html }}</ref>


Helsinki has experienced strong growth since the 1810s, when it replaced [[Turku]] as the capital of the [[Grand Duchy of Finland]], which later became the sovereign [[Republic of Finland]]. The city continued its growth from that time on, with an exception during the [[Finnish Civil War]]. From the end of [[World War II]] up until the 1970s there was a massive exodus of people from the countryside to the cities of Finland, in particular Helsinki. Between 1944 and 1969 the population of the city nearly doubled from 275,000<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin historia |url=http://www.hel.fi/hki/Helsinki/en/Etusivu |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Hel.fi |archive-date=23 May 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100523085802/http://www.hel.fi/hki/Helsinki/en/Etusivu }}</ref> to 525,600.<ref>{{cite web |date=30 December 1972 |title=Maan alle |url=http://www.aatos.fi/Hki450v/metro.html |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Aatos.fi}}</ref>
Helsinki has experienced strong growth since the 1810s, when it replaced [[Turku]] as the capital of the [[Grand Duchy of Finland]], which later became the sovereign [[Republic of Finland]]. The city continued its growth from that time on, with an exception during the [[Finnish Civil War]]. From the end of [[World War II]] up until the 1970s there was a massive exodus of people from the countryside to the cities of Finland, in particular Helsinki. Between 1944 and 1969 the population of the city nearly doubled from 275,000<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin historia |url=http://www.hel.fi/hki/Helsinki/en/Etusivu |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Hel.fi |archive-date=23 May 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100523085802/http://www.hel.fi/hki/Helsinki/en/Etusivu }}</ref> to 525,600.<ref>{{cite web |date=30 December 1972 |title=Maan alle |url=http://www.aatos.fi/Hki450v/metro.html |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Aatos.fi}}</ref>
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}}
The city of Helsinki is officially [[bilingual]], with both [[Finnish language|Finnish]] and [[Swedish language|Swedish]] as official languages. {{As of|2024}}, the majority of the population, {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish|Helsinki}}}} persons ({{Percentage|sigfig = 3|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}}}), spoke Finnish as their first language. The number of [[Swedish-speaking population of Finland|Swedish speakers]] was {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish|Helsinki }}}} persons ({{Percentage|sigfig = 2|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}}}) of the population.  
The city of Helsinki is officially [[bilingual]], with both [[Finnish language|Finnish]] and [[Swedish language|Swedish]] as official languages. {{As of|2024}}, the majority of the population, {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish|Helsinki}}}} persons ({{Percentage|sigfig = 3|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}}}), spoke Finnish as their first language. The number of [[Swedish-speaking population of Finland|Swedish speakers]] was {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish|Helsinki }}}} persons ({{Percentage|sigfig = 2|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}}}) of the population.


In addition, the number of people who speak [[Sámi languages|Sámi]], Finland's third official language, was only {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/native language Sami|Helsinki }}}} persons ({{Percentage|sigfig = 1|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Sami|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}}}) of the population. Although few people speak the Sámi languages as their mother tongue, there are 527 people of Sami origin.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.stat.fi/tietotrendit/blogit/2021/oulusta-on-tullut-suomen-suurin-saamelaiskyla/ |title=Oulusta tullut Suomen suurin saamelaiskylä – Helsinki on viides &#124; Tieto&trendit |language=fi|publisher=Stat.fi |date= |access-date=5 May 2022}}</ref> There are 93 Tatar speakers in Helsinki, almost half of the total number of Tatar speakers in Finland.
In addition, the number of people who speak [[Sámi languages|Sámi]], Finland's third official language, was only {{formatnum: {{Data Finland municipality/native language Sami|Helsinki }}}} persons ({{Percentage|sigfig = 1|{{Data Finland municipality/native language Sami|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}}}) of the population. Although few people speak the Sámi languages as their mother tongue, there are 527 people of Sami origin.<ref>{{cite web |date= |title=Oulusta tullut Suomen suurin saamelaiskylä – Helsinki on viides &#124; Tieto&trendit |trans-title=Oulu has become Finland’s largest Sámi village – Helsinki is fifth |url=https://www.stat.fi/tietotrendit/blogit/2021/oulusta-on-tullut-suomen-suurin-saamelaiskyla/ |access-date=5 May 2022 |website=stat.fi |publisher= |language=fi}}</ref> There are 93 Tatar speakers in Helsinki, almost half of the total number of Tatar speakers in Finland.


[[Helsinki slang]] is a regional dialect of the city. Historically, it was a combination of Finnish and Swedish, with influences from Russian and German. Nowadays it has a strong English influence. Today, however, Finnish is the common language of communication between Finnish speakers, Swedish speakers and speakers of other languages ([[New Finn]]s) in everyday public life between strangers.<ref>{{cite web|title=Immigrants Learning Swedish over Finnish Run into Problems|date=4 November 2010 |url=https://yle.fi/news/3-5664606}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Helsingfors blir allt mer flerspråkigt: "Svårt att klara sig på svenska"|url=https://svenska.yle.fi/a/7-1316759}}</ref>
[[Helsinki slang]] is a regional dialect of the city. Historically, it was a combination of Finnish and Swedish, with influences from Russian and German. Nowadays it has a strong English influence. Today, however, Finnish is the common language of communication between Finnish speakers, Swedish speakers and speakers of other languages ([[New Finn]]s) in everyday public life between strangers.<ref>{{cite web|title=Immigrants Learning Swedish over Finnish Run into Problems|date=4 November 2010 |url=https://yle.fi/news/3-5664606}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingfors blir allt mer flerspråkigt: "Svårt att klara sig på svenska" |trans-title=Helsinki is becoming increasingly multilingual: "Hard to get by in Swedish" |url=https://svenska.yle.fi/a/7-1316759 |language=sv}}</ref>


The city of Helsinki and the national authorities have specifically targeted Swedish speakers. Knowledge of Finnish is essential in business and is usually a basic requirement in the labour market.<ref name="yle.fi">{{cite web |title=Immigrants Learning Swedish over Finnish Run into Problems &#124; News &#124; YLE Uutiset |date=4 November 2010 |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/immigrants_learning_swedish_over_finnish_run_into_problems/2114684 |access-date=16 September 2011 |publisher=yle.fi}}</ref> Swedish speakers are most concentrated in the southern parts of the city. The district with the most Swedish speakers is [[Ullanlinna|Ullanlinna/Ulrikasborg]] with 2,098 (19.6%), while [[Kyläsaari|Byholmen]] is the only district where Swedish is the majority language (at 82.8%). The number of Swedish speakers decreased every year until 2008, and has increased every year since then. Since 2007, the number of Swedish speakers has increased by 2,351.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hbl.fi/artikel/har-bor-de-svensksprakiga-i-helsingfors-se-hur-det-ser-ut-i-ditt-omrade/ |title=Här bor de svenskspråkiga i Helsingfors – Se hur det ser ut i ditt område |publisher=Hbl.fi |date= 20 May 2018|access-date=5 May 2022}}</ref> In 1890, Finnish speakers overtook Swedish speakers to become the majority of the city's population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin nimistön vaiheita |url=https://kaino.kotus.fi/www/verkkojulkaisut/julk125/helsinki/ |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Kotimaisten kielten tutkimuskeskus}}</ref> At that time, the population of Helsinki was 61,530.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kysy.fi &#124; Helsingin kaupunginkirjasto |url=http://igs.kirjastot.fi/iGS/kysymykset/haku.aspx?word=Viipuri |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120504201358/http://igs.kirjastot.fi/iGS/kysymykset/haku.aspx?word=Viipuri |archive-date=4 May 2012 |access-date=17 February 2014 |publisher=Igs.kirjastot.fi |language=fi}}</ref>
The city of Helsinki and the national authorities have specifically targeted Swedish speakers. Knowledge of Finnish is essential in business and is usually a basic requirement in the labour market.<ref name="yle.fi">{{cite web |title=Immigrants Learning Swedish over Finnish Run into Problems &#124; News &#124; YLE Uutiset |date=4 November 2010 |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/immigrants_learning_swedish_over_finnish_run_into_problems/2114684 |access-date=16 September 2011 |publisher=yle.fi}}</ref> Swedish speakers are most concentrated in the southern parts of the city. The district with the most Swedish speakers is [[Ullanlinna|Ullanlinna/Ulrikasborg]] with 2,098 (19.6%), while {{ill|Kyläsaari|fi|Kyläsaari (Helsinki)|lt=Byholmen}} is the only district where Swedish is the majority language (at 82.8%). The number of Swedish speakers decreased every year until 2008, and has increased every year since then. Since 2007, the number of Swedish speakers has increased by 2,351.<ref>{{cite web |date=20 May 2018 |title=Här bor de svenskspråkiga i Helsingfors – Se hur det ser ut i ditt område |trans-title=Here live the Swedish‑speaking in Helsinki – See what it looks like in your area |url=https://www.hbl.fi/artikel/har-bor-de-svensksprakiga-i-helsingfors-se-hur-det-ser-ut-i-ditt-omrade/ |access-date=5 May 2022 |website=hbl.fi |publisher= |language=sv}}</ref> In 1890, Finnish speakers overtook Swedish speakers to become the majority of the city's population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Helsingin nimistön vaiheita |trans-title=The phases of Helsinki's place names |url=https://kaino.kotus.fi/www/verkkojulkaisut/julk125/helsinki/ |access-date=13 April 2010 |publisher=Kotimaisten kielten tutkimuskeskus |language=fi}}</ref> At that time, the population of Helsinki was 61,530.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kysy.fi &#124; Helsingin kaupunginkirjasto |url=http://igs.kirjastot.fi/iGS/kysymykset/haku.aspx?word=Viipuri |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120504201358/http://igs.kirjastot.fi/iGS/kysymykset/haku.aspx?word=Viipuri |archive-date=4 May 2012 |access-date=17 February 2014 |publisher=Igs.kirjastot.fi |language=fi}}</ref>


Foreign languages were spoken by {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language other|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|1}}}} of the population.<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final"/> As [[English language|English]] and [[Swedish language|Swedish]] are compulsory school subjects, functional bilingualism or trilingualism acquired through language studies is not uncommon. At least 160 different languages are spoken in Helsinki. {{As of|2024}}, the most common foreign languages are [[Russian language|Russian]] (3.1%), [[Somali language|Somali]] (2.2%), [[Arabic]] (1.6%), [[English language|English]] (1.5%), [[Estonian language|Estonian]] (1.4%), [[Chinese language|Chinese]] (0.7%) and [[Persian language|Persian]] (0.7%).<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final"/>
Foreign languages were spoken by {{Formatnum: {{pct|{{Data Finland municipality/native language other|Helsinki}}|{{Data Finland municipality/native language total|Helsinki}}|1}}}} of the population.<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final"/> As [[English language|English]] and [[Swedish language|Swedish]] are compulsory school subjects, functional bilingualism or trilingualism acquired through language studies is not uncommon. At least 160 different languages are spoken in Helsinki. {{As of|2024}}, the most common foreign languages are [[Russian language|Russian]] (3.1%), [[Somali language|Somali]] (2.2%), [[Arabic]] (1.6%), [[English language|English]] (1.5%), [[Estonian language|Estonian]] (1.4%), [[Chinese language|Chinese]] (0.7%) and [[Persian language|Persian]] (0.7%).<ref name="statistics-finland-population-2024-final"/>
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[[File:Helsinki Helsingfors Synagogue 02.png|thumb|left|[[Helsinki Synagogue]] in 2020]]
[[File:Helsinki Helsingfors Synagogue 02.png|thumb|left|[[Helsinki Synagogue]] in 2020]]
There are around 30 mosques in the Helsinki region. Many linguistic and ethnic groups such as [[Bangladeshis]], [[Kosovo Albanians|Kosovars]], [[Kurds]] and [[Bosniaks]] have established their own mosques.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kielimoskeija: Kallion moskeijassa lapsista kasvatetaan pakistanilaisia |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/kielimoskeija_kallion_moskeijassa_lapsista_kasvatetaan_pakistanilaisia/8374875 |website=Yle Uutiset|date=28 October 2015 }}</ref> The largest congregation in both Helsinki and Finland is the {{ill|Helsinki Islamic Center|fi|Helsinki Islam Keskus}}, established in 1995. It has over 2,800 members {{as of|2017|lc=yes}}, and it received €24,131 in government assistance.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://minedu.fi/documents/1410845/4935909/2018+uskonnolliset+yhdyskunnat.pdf/d311612c-ac42-4181-901c-41f2e4b4a8c7/2018+uskonnolliset+yhdyskunnat.pdf.pdf|title=OKM - Avustukset rekisteröityjen uskonnollisten yhdyskuntien toimintaan v. 2018|website=Minedu.fi|access-date=16 December 2021}}</ref>
There are around 30 mosques in the Helsinki region. Many linguistic and ethnic groups such as [[Bangladeshis]], [[Kosovo Albanians|Kosovars]], [[Kurds]] and [[Bosniaks]] have established their own mosques.<ref>{{cite web |date=28 October 2015 |title=Kielimoskeija: Kallion moskeijassa lapsista kasvatetaan pakistanilaisia |trans-title=Language mosque: At the Kallio mosque, children are being raised to become Pakistanis |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/kielimoskeija_kallion_moskeijassa_lapsista_kasvatetaan_pakistanilaisia/8374875 |website=Yle Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref> The largest congregation in both Helsinki and Finland is the {{ill|Helsinki Islamic Center|fi|Helsinki Islam Keskus}}, established in 1995. It has over 2,800 members {{as of|2017|lc=yes}}, and it received €24,131 in government assistance.<ref>{{cite web |title=OKM - Avustukset rekisteröityjen uskonnollisten yhdyskuntien toimintaan v. 2018 |trans-title=Ministry of Education and Culture – Grants for the activities of registered religious communities in 2018 |url=https://minedu.fi/documents/1410845/4935909/2018+uskonnolliset+yhdyskunnat.pdf/d311612c-ac42-4181-901c-41f2e4b4a8c7/2018+uskonnolliset+yhdyskunnat.pdf.pdf |access-date=16 December 2021 |website=Minedu.fi |language=fi}}</ref>


In 2015, imam {{ill|Anas Hajar|fi|Anas Hajjar}} estimated that on big celebrations around 10,000 Muslims visit mosques.<ref>{{cite web |title=Vaikuttajaimaami: "Pääkaupunkiseudulle tarvitaan jopa viisi suurmoskeijaa" |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/vaikuttajaimaami_paakaupunkiseudulle_tarvitaan_jopa_viisi_suurmoskeijaa/8412539 |website=Yle Uutiset|date=28 October 2015 }}</ref> In 2004, it was estimated that there were 8,000 Muslims in Helsinki, 1.5% of the population at the time.<ref>{{cite web |date=19 February 2004 |title=Tietokulma &#124; Islam Helsingissä |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000004203725.html |website=Helsingin Sanomat}}</ref> The number of people in Helsinki with a background from Muslim majority countries was nearly 41,000 as of 2021, representing over 6% of the population.
In 2015, imam {{ill|Anas Hajar|fi|Anas Hajjar}} estimated that on big celebrations around 10,000 Muslims visit mosques.<ref>{{cite web |date=28 October 2015 |title=Vaikuttajaimaami: "Pääkaupunkiseudulle tarvitaan jopa viisi suurmoskeijaa" |trans-title=Influential imam: "The capital region needs up to five grand mosques" |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/vaikuttajaimaami_paakaupunkiseudulle_tarvitaan_jopa_viisi_suurmoskeijaa/8412539 |website=Yle Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref> In 2004, it was estimated that there were 8,000 Muslims in Helsinki, 1.5% of the population at the time.<ref>{{cite web |date=19 February 2004 |title=Tietokulma &#124; Islam Helsingissä |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000004203725.html |website=Helsingin Sanomat}}</ref> The number of people in Helsinki with a background from Muslim majority countries was nearly 41,000 as of 2021, representing over 6% of the population.


The main synagogue of Helsinki is the [[Helsinki Synagogue]] from 1906, located in [[Kamppi]]. It has over 1,200 members, out of the 1,800 [[Jews in Finland]], and it is the older of the two buildings in Finland originally built as a synagogue, followed by the [[Turku Synagogue]] in 1912.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.rky.fi/read/asp/r_kohde_det.aspx?KOHDE_ID=1601 | title= Helsingin synagoga | work= RKY | publisher= Museovirasto | access-date= 30 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref> The congregation includes a synagogue, Jewish kindergarten, school, library, Jewish meat shop, two Jewish cemeteries and an retirement home. Many Jewish organizations and societies are based there, and the synagogue publishes the main Jewish magazine in Finland, ''{{ill|HaKehila|fi}}''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://jchelsinki.fi/tietoa-meista/helsingin-synagoga/|title=Helsingin synagoga|website=Jchelsinki.fi|access-date=16 December 2021}}</ref>
The main synagogue of Helsinki is the [[Helsinki Synagogue]] from 1906, located in [[Kamppi]]. It has over 1,200 members, out of the 1,800 [[Jews in Finland]], and it is the older of the two buildings in Finland originally built as a synagogue, followed by the [[Turku Synagogue]] in 1912.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.rky.fi/read/asp/r_kohde_det.aspx?KOHDE_ID=1601 | title= Helsingin synagoga | work= RKY | publisher= Museovirasto | access-date= 30 December 2020 | language=fi}}</ref> The congregation includes a synagogue, Jewish kindergarten, school, library, Jewish meat shop, two Jewish cemeteries and an retirement home. Many Jewish organizations and societies are based there, and the synagogue publishes the main Jewish magazine in Finland, ''{{ill|HaKehila|fi}}''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://jchelsinki.fi/tietoa-meista/helsingin-synagoga/|title=Helsingin synagoga|website=Jchelsinki.fi|access-date=16 December 2021}}</ref>
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===Theatres===
===Theatres===
[[File:Helsinki - Finnish National Theatre and the Finnish National Writer - panoramio.jpg|thumb|The [[Finnish National Theatre]] (1902), designed by architect Onni Tarjanne. In front of it, the [[Aleksis Kivi Memorial|memorial statue of Aleksis Kivi]].]]
[[File:Helsinki - Finnish National Theatre and the Finnish National Writer - panoramio.jpg|thumb|The [[Finnish National Theatre]] (1902), designed by architect Onni Tarjanne. In front of it, the [[Aleksis Kivi Memorial|memorial statue of Aleksis Kivi]].]]
Helsinki has three major theatres: The [[Finnish National Theatre]], the [[Helsinki City Theatre]], and the [[Swedish Theatre]] (''Svenska Teatern''). Other notable theatres in the city include the [[Alexander Theatre]], ''{{ill|Q-teatteri|fi}}'', {{ill|Savoy Theatre (Helsinki)|fi|Savoy-teatteri|lt=Savoy Theatre}}, {{ill|KOM-theatre|fi|KOM-teatteri}}, and ''{{ill|Teatteri Jurkka|fi}}''.
Helsinki has three major theatres: The [[Finnish National Theatre]], the [[Helsinki City Theatre]], and the [[Swedish Theatre]] (''Svenska Teatern''). Other notable theatres in the city include the [[Alexander Theatre]], ''{{ill|Q-teatteri|fi}}'', {{ill|Savoy Theatre (Helsinki)|fi|Savoy-teatteri|lt=Savoy Theatre}}, ''[[KOM-teatteri]]'', and ''{{ill|Teatteri Jurkka|fi}}''.


===Music===
===Music===
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[[Sanoma]] publishes Finland's [[Newspaper of record|journal of record]], {{Lang|fi|[[Helsingin Sanomat]]}}, the [[Tabloid (newspaper format)|tabloid]] ''[[Ilta-Sanomat]]'', the commerce-oriented ''[[Taloussanomat]]'', and the television channel [[Nelonen (television)|Nelonen]]. Another Helsinki-based media house, [[Alma Media]], publishes over thirty magazines, including the tabloid ''[[Iltalehti]]'', and the commerce-oriented ''[[Kauppalehti]]''.
[[Sanoma]] publishes Finland's [[Newspaper of record|journal of record]], {{Lang|fi|[[Helsingin Sanomat]]}}, the [[Tabloid (newspaper format)|tabloid]] ''[[Ilta-Sanomat]]'', the commerce-oriented ''[[Taloussanomat]]'', and the television channel [[Nelonen (television)|Nelonen]]. Another Helsinki-based media house, [[Alma Media]], publishes over thirty magazines, including the tabloid ''[[Iltalehti]]'', and the commerce-oriented ''[[Kauppalehti]]''.


Finland's national public-broadcasting institution [[Yle]] operates five television channels and thirteen radio channels in both national languages. Yle is headquartered in the neighbourhood of [[Pasila]]. All TV channels are broadcast [[Digital television|digitally]], both terrestrially and on cable. Yle's studio area houses the {{convert|146|m|ft|adj=on}} high television and radio tower, [[Yle Transmission Tower]] (''Pasilan linkkitorni''),<ref>{{cite web |url = http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=292 |title = Pasilan linkkitorni – SkyscraperPage.com |access-date  = 29 January 2022}}</ref> which is the third tallest structure in Helsinki and one of Helsinki's most famous landmarks, from the top of which, in good weather, can be seen even as far as [[Tallinn]] over the Gulf of Finland.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://yle.fi/uutiset/3-8442453 | title= Pasilan linkkitorni tyhjeni, mihin katosivat maankuulun maamerkin lautasantennit? | work= [[Yle]]| date=10 November 2015 |access-date = 29 January 2022 | language = fi}}</ref>
Finland's national public-broadcasting institution [[Yle]] operates five television channels and thirteen radio channels in both national languages. Yle is headquartered in the neighbourhood of [[Pasila]]. All TV channels are broadcast [[Digital television|digitally]], both terrestrially and on cable. Yle's studio area houses the {{convert|146|m|ft|adj=on}} high television and radio tower, [[Yle Transmission Tower]] (''Pasilan linkkitorni''),<ref>{{cite web |url = http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=292 |title = Pasilan linkkitorni – SkyscraperPage.com |access-date  = 29 January 2022}}</ref> which is the third tallest structure in Helsinki and one of Helsinki's most famous landmarks, from the top of which, in good weather, can be seen even as far as [[Tallinn]] over the Gulf of Finland.<ref>{{cite web |date=10 November 2015 |title=Pasilan linkkitorni tyhjeni, mihin katosivat maankuulun maamerkin lautasantennit? |trans-title=The Pasila transmission tower was emptied — where did the dish antennas of the nationally known landmark disappear to? |url=http://yle.fi/uutiset/3-8442453 |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Yle]] |language=fi}}</ref>


The commercial television channel [[MTV3]] and commercial radio channel [[Radio Nova (Finland)|Radio Nova]] are owned by [[Nordic Broadcasting]] ([[Bonnier Group|Bonnier]] and [[Proventus]]).
The commercial television channel [[MTV3]] and commercial radio channel [[Radio Nova (Finland)|Radio Nova]] are owned by [[Nordic Broadcasting]] ([[Bonnier Group|Bonnier]] and [[Proventus]]).
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===Food===
===Food===
[[File:Ekbergin kahvila ja leipomon myymälä- Bulevardi 9 - Kamppi - Helsinki - m.jpg|thumb|[[Café Ekberg]], the oldest coffeehouse of Helsinki, along the [[Bulevardi]] in the [[Kamppi]] district]]
[[File:Ekbergin kahvila ja leipomon myymälä- Bulevardi 9 - Kamppi - Helsinki - m.jpg|thumb|[[Café Ekberg]], the oldest coffeehouse of Helsinki, along the [[Bulevardi]] in the [[Kamppi]] district]]
Helsinki was already known in the 18th century for its abundant number of [[inn]]s and [[pub]]s, where both locals and those who landed in the harbor were offered plenty of [[Alcoholic drink|alcoholic beverages]].<ref name="alcohol">{{cite web|url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/helsinki/art-2000008520179.html|title=1700-luvun Helsingissä ryypättiin tilanteissa, joita nykyihmisen on vaikea käsittää|trans-title=In 18th-century Helsinki, drinking was done in situations that are difficult for modern man to comprehend|first=Tuomo|last=Väliaho|work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]]|date=26 January 2022|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> At that time, taxes on the sale of alcohol were a very significant source of income for Helsinki, and one of the most important sellers of alcohol was {{ill|Johan Sederholm|fr|Johan Sederholm}} (1722–1805), a trade councilor who attracted rural [[merchant]]s with alcohol and made good deals.<ref name="alcohol"/> Gradually, a new kind of beverage culture began to grow in the next century, and as early as 1852, the first [[Coffeehouse|café]] of Finland, [[Café Ekberg]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ekberg.fi/en/|title=Home page|website=Ekberg.fi|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/1556741|title=Tässä ovat Helsingin kahvilakisan voittaja ja yli sata muuta suosikkia|first=Marketta|last=Karjalainen|work=[[Helsingin Uutiset]]|date=26 November 2016|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> was established by confectioner {{ill|Fredrik Ekberg|fi|Fredrik Ekberg}} (1825–1891) after attending his studies in [[St. Petersburg]]. Ekberg has also been said to have created Finland's "national [[pastry]] tradition".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://kansallisbiografia.fi/kansallisbiografia/henkilo/5689|title=Ekberg, Fredrik (1825 - 1891)|publisher=[[The National Biography of Finland]]|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> At first, café culture was only a prerogative of sophisticated [[elite]], when it recently began to take shape as the right of every man.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ruokatieto.fi/ruokakasvatus/hyva-tavaton-ruoka-ja-tapakulttuuri/mista-ruokakulttuuri-koostuu/maakuntien-ruokaperinteita|title=Maakuntien ruokaperinteitä|work=Ruokatieto|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> Today, there are several hundred cafés in Helsinki, the most notable of which is [[Cafe Regatta]], which is very popular with foreign tourists.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/eat-and-drink/caf%C3%A9s/quirky-caf%C3%A9s-that-the-locals-love|title=Quirky cafés that the locals love|work=My Helsinki|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.tripadvisor.fi/Restaurant_Review-g189934-d1596888-Reviews-Cafe_Regatta-Helsinki_Southern_Finland.html| title= Cafe Regatta | website= [[Tripadvisor]]| access-date = 29 January 2022 | language = fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.city.fi/opas/cityn+suuri+ravintolaaanestys+2014+helsinki/8003| title= Cityn Suuri Ravintolaäänestys 2014: Helsinki| work= [[City (magazine)|City]]| date= 7 June 2014 | access-date = 29 January 2022 | language = fi}}</ref>
Helsinki was already known in the 18th century for its abundant number of [[inn]]s and [[pub]]s, where both locals and those who landed in the harbor were offered plenty of [[Alcoholic drink|alcoholic beverages]].<ref name="alcohol">{{cite web|url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/helsinki/art-2000008520179.html|title=1700-luvun Helsingissä ryypättiin tilanteissa, joita nykyihmisen on vaikea käsittää|trans-title=In 18th-century Helsinki, drinking was done in situations that are difficult for modern man to comprehend|first=Tuomo|last=Väliaho|work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]]|date=26 January 2022|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> At that time, taxes on the sale of alcohol were a very significant source of income for Helsinki, and one of the most important sellers of alcohol was [[Johan Sederholm]] (1722–1805), a trade councilor who attracted rural [[merchant]]s with alcohol and made good deals.<ref name="alcohol"/> Gradually, a new kind of beverage culture began to grow in the next century, and as early as 1852, the first [[Coffeehouse|café]] of Finland, [[Café Ekberg]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ekberg.fi/en/|title=Home page|website=Ekberg.fi|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Karjalainen |first=Marketta |date=26 November 2016 |title=Tässä ovat Helsingin kahvilakisan voittaja ja yli sata muuta suosikkia |trans-title=Here are the winner of Helsinki’s café contest and over a hundred other favorites |url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/1556741 |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Helsingin Uutiset]] |language=fi}}</ref> was established by confectioner {{ill|Fredrik Ekberg|fi|Fredrik Ekberg}} (1825–1891) after attending his studies in [[St. Petersburg]]. Ekberg has also been said to have created Finland's "national [[pastry]] tradition".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://kansallisbiografia.fi/kansallisbiografia/henkilo/5689|title=Ekberg, Fredrik (1825 - 1891)|publisher=[[The National Biography of Finland]]|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> At first, café culture was only a prerogative of sophisticated [[elite]], when it recently began to take shape as the right of every man.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ruokatieto.fi/ruokakasvatus/hyva-tavaton-ruoka-ja-tapakulttuuri/mista-ruokakulttuuri-koostuu/maakuntien-ruokaperinteita|title=Maakuntien ruokaperinteitä|work=Ruokatieto|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> Today, there are several hundred cafés in Helsinki, the most notable of which is [[Cafe Regatta]], which is very popular with foreign tourists.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/eat-and-drink/caf%C3%A9s/quirky-caf%C3%A9s-that-the-locals-love|title=Quirky cafés that the locals love|work=My Helsinki|access-date=29 January 2022|archive-date=29 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220129082454/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/eat-and-drink/caf%C3%A9s/quirky-caf%C3%A9s-that-the-locals-love|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.tripadvisor.fi/Restaurant_Review-g189934-d1596888-Reviews-Cafe_Regatta-Helsinki_Southern_Finland.html| title= Cafe Regatta | website= [[Tripadvisor]]| access-date = 29 January 2022 | language = fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.city.fi/opas/cityn+suuri+ravintolaaanestys+2014+helsinki/8003| title= Cityn Suuri Ravintolaäänestys 2014: Helsinki| work= [[City (magazine)|City]]| date= 7 June 2014 | access-date = 29 January 2022 | language = fi}}</ref><ref name="guardian-dunlop"/>


[[File:Markthalle Fisch.JPG|thumb|left|Fish for sale in the [[Old Market Hall, Helsinki|Old Market Hall]] (''Vanha kauppahalli'')]]
[[File:Markthalle Fisch.JPG|thumb|left|Fish for sale in the [[Old Market Hall, Helsinki|Old Market Hall]] (''Vanha kauppahalli'')]]
As an important [[port city]] on the Baltic Sea, Helsinki has long been known for its [[Fish as food|fish food]], and it has recently started to become one of the leading fish food capitals in [[Northern Europe]].<ref name="kosmos">{{cite web|url=http://www.ravintolakosmos.fi/|title=Helsingin ruokakulttuuri elää voimakasta nousukautta|work=Ravintola Kosmos|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> Helsinki's [[Market Square, Helsinki|Market Square]] is especially known for its traditional [[herring]] market, which has been organized since 1743.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://silakkamarkkinat.fi/|title=Stadin Silakkamarkkinat|website=Silakkamarkkinat.fi|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.stadissa.fi/tapahtumat/32718/stadin-silakkamarkkinat|title=Stadin Silakkamarkkinat|website=Stadissa.fi|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hs.fi/nyt/art-2000006289548.html|title=Kala maistuisi yhä useammalle, mutta kalaravintolat ovat Helsingissä harvassa – kriitikko söi niistä kolmessa|work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]]|first=Anna|last=Paljakka|date=30 October 2019|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref><ref name="helsinki-food"/> [[Salmon]] is also a typical Helsinki fish dish, both fried and [[Fish soup|souped]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hs.fi/ruoka/art-2000008198626.html|title=Perinteistä lohikeittoa tarjoillaan ravintoloissa ympäri Suomen, mutta valmistuksessa ontuu yksi vaihe – HS testasi kolmen ravintolan keiton ja löysi erinomaisen|work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]]|first=Arda|last=Yildirim|date=4 October 2021|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> The most prestigious restaurants specializing in [[seafood]] include Restaurant Fisken på Disken.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.fisken.fi/en/fisken-pa-disken/|title=Seafood bar and restaurant|publisher=Fisken på Disken|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/4308497|title=Tässä ovat kaupungin parhaat kala-ravintolat – Katso asiantuntijoiden vinkit|work=[[Helsingin Uutiset]]|first=Sakari|last=Nupponen|date=29 September 2021|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref>
As an important [[port city]] on the Baltic Sea, Helsinki has long been known for its [[Fish as food|fish food]], and it has recently started to become one of the leading fish food capitals in [[Northern Europe]].<ref name="guardian-dunlop"/><ref name="kosmos">{{cite web |title=Helsingin ruokakulttuuri elää voimakasta nousukautta |trans-title=Helsinki’s food culture is experiencing a strong rise |url=http://www.ravintolakosmos.fi/ |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=Ravintola Kosmos |language=fi}}</ref> Helsinki's [[Market Square, Helsinki|Market Square]] is especially known for its traditional [[herring]] market, which has been organized since 1743.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://silakkamarkkinat.fi/|title=Stadin Silakkamarkkinat|website=Silakkamarkkinat.fi|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.stadissa.fi/tapahtumat/32718/stadin-silakkamarkkinat|title=Stadin Silakkamarkkinat|website=Stadissa.fi|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Paljakka |first=Anna |date=30 October 2019 |title=Kala maistuisi yhä useammalle, mutta kalaravintolat ovat Helsingissä harvassa – kriitikko söi niistä kolmessa |trans-title=Fish would appeal to more and more people, but fish restaurants are few and far between in Helsinki – a critic dined at three of them |url=https://www.hs.fi/nyt/art-2000006289548.html |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |language=fi}}</ref><ref name="helsinki-food"/> [[Salmon]] is also a typical Helsinki fish dish, both fried and [[Fish soup|souped]].<ref name="guardian-dunlop"/><ref>{{cite web |last=Yildirim |first=Arda |date=4 October 2021 |title=Perinteistä lohikeittoa tarjoillaan ravintoloissa ympäri Suomen, mutta valmistuksessa ontuu yksi vaihe – HS testasi kolmen ravintolan keiton ja löysi erinomaisen |trans-title=Traditional salmon soup is served in restaurants across Finland, but one step in its preparation is lacking – HS tested the soup at three restaurants and found an excellent on |url=https://www.hs.fi/ruoka/art-2000008198626.html |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |language=fi}}</ref> The most prestigious restaurants specializing in [[seafood]] include Restaurant Fisken på Disken.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.fisken.fi/en/fisken-pa-disken/|title=Seafood bar and restaurant|publisher=Fisken på Disken|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Nupponen |first=Sakari |date=29 September 2021 |title=Tässä ovat kaupungin parhaat kala-ravintolat – Katso asiantuntijoiden vinkit |trans-title=Here are the city's best fish restaurants – See the experts' tips |url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/4308497 |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Helsingin Uutiset]] |language=fi}}</ref>


[[File:Työpajankatu 2, Tynnyrintekijänkatu - Helsinki 2016 - G3634 - hkm.HKMS000005-km0000okav.jpg|thumb|A terrace of the Restaurant Roslund at the [[Teurastamo]] area]]
[[File:Työpajankatu 2, Tynnyrintekijänkatu - Helsinki 2016 - G3634 - hkm.HKMS000005-km0000okav.jpg|thumb|A terrace of the Restaurant Roslund at the [[Teurastamo]] area]]
Helsinki is currently experiencing a period of booming [[food culture]], and it has developed into an internationally acclaimed food city, receiving recognition for promoting food culture.<ref name="helsinki-food"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hs.fi/ruoka/art-2000002774443.html|title=Helsingin ruokakulttuuri palkittiin|work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]]|first=Johanna|last=Tikkanen|date=3 November 2014|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.city.fi/kulttuuri/syomaan+ruokakulttuurin+asiantuntija+milla+visuri+helsingissa+kaikki+on+mahdollista/10950|title=Syömään! Ruokakulttuurin asiantuntija Milla Visuri: "Helsingissä kaikki on mahdollista"|work=City|first=Tiia|last=Rantanen|date=20 June 2017|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> The local food culture is made up of cuisines from around the world and the fusions they form. Various [[Asian cuisine|Asian restaurants]] such as [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese]], [[Thai cuisine|Thai]], [[Indian cuisine|Indian]] and [[Nepalese cuisine|Nepalese]] are particularly prominent in Helsinki's cityscape, but over the past couple of years, restaurants serving [[Vietnamese cuisine|Vietnamese]] food have been very popular.<ref name="kosmos"/> [[Sushi]] [[restaurant buffets]] have also made their way into the city's restaurant offerings in one fell swoop.<ref name="kosmos"/> The third prominent trend is restaurants serving pure local food, many of which specialize primarily in serving pure [[Nordic cuisine|Nordic flavors]].<ref name="kosmos"/> In past years [[Middle Eastern cuisine|Middle Eastern]] food culture rose in its popularity. Especially Helsinki's eastern part offers many different options for Middle Eastern cuisine lovers.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/journey-to-east-helsinki-to-discover-middle-eastern-and-caucasian-food|title=Journey to East Helsinki to discover Middle Eastern and Caucasian food|publisher=My Helsinki|access-date=31 January 2023|language=fi}}</ref> There is also some touches of [[Russian cuisine]], one of which is the Finnish version of ''[[blini]]s'', a thick [[pancake]]s that are usually fried in a cast-iron pan.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/top-russian-restaurants-in-helsinki|title=Top Russian restaurants in Helsinki|publisher=My Helsinki|access-date=11 February 2022|language=fi|archive-date=11 February 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230211191126/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/top-russian-restaurants-in-helsinki}}</ref> One of the most significant food culture venues in Helsinki is the general public area known as [[Teurastamo]] in the [[Hermanni (Helsinki)|Hermanni]] district, which operated as the city's [[slaughterhouse]] between 1933 and 1992, to which the name of the place also refers.<ref name="helsinki-food"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://teurastamo.com/en/|title=Home - Teurastamo|website=Teurastamo.com|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/see-and-do/sights/teurastamo|title=Teurastamo|publisher=My Helsinki|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref>
Helsinki is currently experiencing a period of booming [[food culture]], and it has developed into an internationally acclaimed food city, receiving recognition for promoting food culture;<ref name="helsinki-food"/><ref>{{cite web |last=Tikkanen |first=Johanna |date=3 November 2014 |title=Helsingin ruokakulttuuri palkittiin |trans-title=Helsinki's food culture was awarded |url=https://www.hs.fi/ruoka/art-2000002774443.html |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Helsingin Sanomat]] |language=fi}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Rantanen |first=Tiia |date=20 June 2017 |title=Syömään! Ruokakulttuurin asiantuntija Milla Visuri: "Helsingissä kaikki on mahdollista" |trans-title=Let’s eat! Food culture expert Milla Visuri: "In Helsinki, everything is possible" |url=https://www.city.fi/kulttuuri/syomaan+ruokakulttuurin+asiantuntija+milla+visuri+helsingissa+kaikki+on+mahdollista/10950 |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=City |language=fi}}</ref> the city's gastronomy is considered unique, because many restaurants offers, in addition to fish dishes, [[reindeer]], [[Moose|elk]], and even [[bear]] meat.<ref name="guardian-dunlop">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2025/jul/16/best-restaurants-in-helsinki-finland|title=Foodie Finland: the best restaurants and cafes in Helsinki|first=Fiona|last=Dunlop|work=[[The Guardian]]|date=16 July 2025|access-date=17 July 2025}}</ref> The local food culture is made up of cuisines from around the world and the fusions they form. Various [[Asian cuisine|Asian restaurants]] such as [[Chinese cuisine|Chinese]], [[Thai cuisine|Thai]], [[Indian cuisine|Indian]] and [[Nepalese cuisine|Nepalese]] are particularly prominent in Helsinki's cityscape, but over the past couple of years, restaurants serving [[Vietnamese cuisine|Vietnamese]] food have been very popular.<ref name="kosmos"/> [[Sushi]] [[restaurant buffets]] have also made their way into the city's restaurant offerings in one fell swoop.<ref name="kosmos"/> The third prominent trend is restaurants serving pure local food, many of which specialize primarily in serving pure [[Nordic cuisine|Nordic flavors]].<ref name="kosmos"/> In past years [[Middle Eastern cuisine|Middle Eastern]] food culture rose in its popularity. Especially Helsinki's eastern part offers many different options for Middle Eastern cuisine lovers.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/journey-to-east-helsinki-to-discover-middle-eastern-and-caucasian-food|title=Journey to East Helsinki to discover Middle Eastern and Caucasian food|publisher=My Helsinki|access-date=31 January 2023|language=fi|archive-date=31 January 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230131220227/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/journey-to-east-helsinki-to-discover-middle-eastern-and-caucasian-food|url-status=dead}}</ref> There is also some touches of [[Russian cuisine]], one of which is the Finnish version of ''[[blini]]s'', a thick [[pancake]]s that are usually fried in a cast-iron pan.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/top-russian-restaurants-in-helsinki|title=Top Russian restaurants in Helsinki|publisher=My Helsinki|access-date=11 February 2022|language=fi|archive-date=11 February 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230211191126/https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/eat-and-drink/restaurants/top-russian-restaurants-in-helsinki}}</ref> One of the most significant food culture venues in Helsinki is the general public area known as [[Teurastamo]] in the [[Hermanni (Helsinki)|Hermanni]] district, which operated as the city's [[slaughterhouse]] between 1933 and 1992, to which the name of the place also refers.<ref name="helsinki-food"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://teurastamo.com/en/|title=Home - Teurastamo|website=Teurastamo.com|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en/see-and-do/sights/teurastamo|title=Teurastamo|publisher=My Helsinki|access-date=29 January 2022}}</ref>


A nationwide food carnival called Restaurant Day (''Ravintolapäivä'') has begun in Helsinki and has traditionally been celebrated since May 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kansanuutiset.fi/artikkeli/2797640-ravintolapaivan-avainsana-on-vapaus|title=Ravintolapäivän avainsana on vapaus|work=[[Kansan Uutiset]]|date=18 May 2012|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi}}</ref> The purpose of the day is to have fun, share new food experiences and enjoy the common environment with the group.<ref name="helsinki-food">{{cite web|url=https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/fi/kulttuuri-ja-vapaa-aika/kaupunkikulttuuri/herkuttele-helsingissa/|title=Herkuttele Helsingissä|publisher=City of Helsinki|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi|archive-date=29 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220129080959/https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/fi/kulttuuri-ja-vapaa-aika/kaupunkikulttuuri/herkuttele-helsingissa/}}</ref>
A nationwide food carnival called Restaurant Day (''Ravintolapäivä'') has begun in Helsinki and has traditionally been celebrated since May 2011.<ref>{{cite web |date=18 May 2012 |title=Ravintolapäivän avainsana on vapaus |trans-title=The key word of Restaurant Day is freedom |url=https://www.kansanuutiset.fi/artikkeli/2797640-ravintolapaivan-avainsana-on-vapaus |access-date=29 January 2022 |work=[[Kansan Uutiset]] |language=fi}}</ref> The purpose of the day is to have fun, share new food experiences and enjoy the common environment with the group.<ref name="helsinki-food">{{cite web|url=https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/fi/kulttuuri-ja-vapaa-aika/kaupunkikulttuuri/herkuttele-helsingissa/|title=Herkuttele Helsingissä|publisher=City of Helsinki|access-date=29 January 2022|language=fi|archive-date=29 January 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220129080959/https://www.hel.fi/helsinki/fi/kulttuuri-ja-vapaa-aika/kaupunkikulttuuri/herkuttele-helsingissa/}}</ref>


===Other===
===Other===
[[Vappu]] is an annual carnival for students and workers on 1 May. The last week of June marks the [[Helsinki Pride]] [[human rights]] event, which was attended by 100,000 marchers in 2018.<ref>{{cite web | url = https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-10282658 | title = Helsingin Pride-kulkueessa jopa 100 000 ihmistä – seurasimme hetki hetkeltä| work = [[YLE]] | date = 30 July 2018| access-date = 27 January 2021 | language = fi }}</ref>
[[Vappu]] is an annual carnival for students and workers on 1 May. The last week of June marks the [[Helsinki Pride]] [[human rights]] event, which was attended by 100,000 marchers in 2018.<ref>{{cite web |date=30 July 2018 |title=Helsingin Pride-kulkueessa jopa 100 000 ihmistä – seurasimme hetki hetkeltä |trans-title=As many as 100,000 people in Helsinki's Pride parade – we followed it moment by moment |url=https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-10282658 |access-date=27 January 2021 |work=[[YLE]] |language=fi}}</ref>


==Sports==
==Sports==
Line 906: Line 920:
Helsinki has a long tradition of sports: the city gained much of its initial international recognition during the [[1952 Summer Olympics]], and the city has arranged sporting events such as the first [[IAAF World Championships in Athletics|World Championships in Athletics]] 1983 and 2005, and the European Championships in Athletics 1971, 1994, and 2012. Helsinki hosts successful local teams in both of the most popular team sports in Finland: [[association football|football]] and [[ice hockey]]. Helsinki houses [[HJK Helsinki]], Finland's largest and most successful football club, and [[HIFK Fotboll|IFK Helsingfors]], their local rivals with 7 championship titles. The fixtures between the two are commonly known as [[Stadin derby]]. Helsinki's track and field club Helsingin Kisa-Veikot is also dominant within Finland. Ice hockey is popular among many Helsinki residents, who usually support either of the local clubs [[HIFK (ice hockey)|IFK Helsingfors]] (HIFK) or [[Jokerit]]. HIFK, with 14 Finnish championships titles, also plays in the highest [[bandy]] division,<ref>Video from the Finnish final 2009 against OLS from [[Oulu]]: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hn-j0t5yxIE Youtube.com]</ref> along with [[Botnia-69]]. The Olympic stadium hosted the first [[Bandy World Championship]] in 1957.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Finnish Bandy Federation |url=http://www.finbandy.fi/info.htm |access-date=2 April 2016}}</ref>
Helsinki has a long tradition of sports: the city gained much of its initial international recognition during the [[1952 Summer Olympics]], and the city has arranged sporting events such as the first [[IAAF World Championships in Athletics|World Championships in Athletics]] 1983 and 2005, and the European Championships in Athletics 1971, 1994, and 2012. Helsinki hosts successful local teams in both of the most popular team sports in Finland: [[association football|football]] and [[ice hockey]]. Helsinki houses [[HJK Helsinki]], Finland's largest and most successful football club, and [[HIFK Fotboll|IFK Helsingfors]], their local rivals with 7 championship titles. The fixtures between the two are commonly known as [[Stadin derby]]. Helsinki's track and field club Helsingin Kisa-Veikot is also dominant within Finland. Ice hockey is popular among many Helsinki residents, who usually support either of the local clubs [[HIFK (ice hockey)|IFK Helsingfors]] (HIFK) or [[Jokerit]]. HIFK, with 14 Finnish championships titles, also plays in the highest [[bandy]] division,<ref>Video from the Finnish final 2009 against OLS from [[Oulu]]: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hn-j0t5yxIE Youtube.com]</ref> along with [[Botnia-69]]. The Olympic stadium hosted the first [[Bandy World Championship]] in 1957.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Finnish Bandy Federation |url=http://www.finbandy.fi/info.htm |access-date=2 April 2016}}</ref>


Helsinki was elected host-city of the 1940 Summer Olympics, but due to World War II they were canceled. Instead Helsinki was the host of the 1952 Summer Olympics. The Olympics were a landmark event symbolically and economically for Helsinki and Finland as a whole that was recovering from the winter war and the continuation war fought with the Soviet Union. Helsinki was also in 1983 the first city to host the World Championships in Athletics. Helsinki also hosted the event in 2005, thus also becoming the first city to host the Championships for a second time. The [[Helsinki City Marathon]] has been held in the city every year since 1981, usually in August.<ref>[https://helsinkicityrunningday.fi/helsinkimaraton/ HELSINKI CITY MARATON 40-VUOTIS JUHLAMITALI – Helsinki City Running Day] (in Finnish)</ref> A [[Formula 3000]] race through the city streets was held on 25 May 1997. In 2009 Helsinki was host of the [[European Figure Skating Championships]], and in 2017 it hosted [[World Figure Skating Championships]]. The city will host the 2021 [[FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup]].  [[American football]] and the [[Vaahteraliiga]] has a strong tradition in the city dating back to the early 1980s.
Helsinki was elected host-city of the 1940 Summer Olympics, but due to World War II they were canceled. Instead Helsinki was the host of the 1952 Summer Olympics. The Olympics were a landmark event symbolically and economically for Helsinki and Finland as a whole that was recovering from the winter war and the continuation war fought with the Soviet Union. Helsinki was also in 1983 the first city to host the World Championships in Athletics. Helsinki also hosted the event in 2005, thus also becoming the first city to host the Championships for a second time. The [[Helsinki City Marathon]] has been held in the city every year since 1981, usually in August.<ref>[https://helsinkicityrunningday.fi/helsinkimaraton/ HELSINKI CITY MARATON 40-VUOTIS JUHLAMITALI – Helsinki City Running Day] (in Finnish)</ref> A [[Formula 3000]] race through the city streets was held on 25 May 1997. In 2009 Helsinki was host of the [[European Figure Skating Championships]], and in 2017 it hosted [[World Figure Skating Championships]]. The city will host the 2021 [[FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup]].  [[American football]] and the [[Vaahteraliiga]] has a strong tradition in the city dating back to the early 1980s; the [[Helsinki Roosters]] are the only Finnish team to have participated in the Vaahteraliiga since its inception in 1980 and are by far the most successful American football team in Finnish history.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://vaahteraliiga.fi/roosters/|title=Helsinki Roosters|publisher=[[Vaahteraliiga]]|access-date=14 July 2025|language=fi}}</ref>


Most of Helsinki's sports venues are under the responsibility of the city's sports office, such as 70 [[sports hall]]s and about 350 [[sports field]]s. There are nine [[ice rinks]], three of which are managed by the Helsinki Sports Agency (''Helsingin liikuntavirasto'').<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.hel.fi/liv/fi/liikuntaviraston-esittely/liikuntaviraston-esittely| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210624202307/https://www.hel.fi/liv/fi/liikuntaviraston-esittely/liikuntaviraston-esittely| archive-date = 24 June 2021| title = Liikuntaviraston esittely {{!}} Helsingin kaupunki}}</ref> In winter, there are seven artificial ice rinks. People can swim in Helsinki in 14 [[swimming pool]]s, the largest of which is the {{ill|Mäkelänrinne Swimming Centre|fi|Mäkelänrinteen uintikeskus}},<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.urheiluhallit.fi/en/locations/makelanrinne.html|title=Mäkelänrinne Swimming Centre - Official Site|website=Urheiluhallit.fi|access-date=16 December 2021|archive-date=26 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210226191745/https://www.urheiluhallit.fi/en/locations/makelanrinne.html}}</ref> two inland swimming pools and more than 20 [[beach]]es, of which [[Hietaniemi Beach]] is probably the most famous.<ref>[http://www.hel.fi/www/liv/fi/palvelut/liikuntaviraston-toimipisteet Liikuntaviraston liikuntapaikat] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170502083821/http://www.hel.fi/www/liv/fi/palvelut/liikuntaviraston-toimipisteet |date=2 May 2017 }} (in Finnish)</ref>
Most of Helsinki's sports venues are under the responsibility of the city's sports office, such as 70 [[sports hall]]s and about 350 [[sports field]]s. There are nine [[ice rinks]], three of which are managed by the Helsinki Sports Agency (''Helsingin liikuntavirasto'').<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.hel.fi/liv/fi/liikuntaviraston-esittely/liikuntaviraston-esittely| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210624202307/https://www.hel.fi/liv/fi/liikuntaviraston-esittely/liikuntaviraston-esittely| archive-date = 24 June 2021| title = Liikuntaviraston esittely {{!}} Helsingin kaupunki}}</ref> In winter, there are seven artificial ice rinks. People can swim in Helsinki in 14 [[swimming pool]]s, the largest of which is the {{ill|Mäkelänrinne Swimming Centre|fi|Mäkelänrinteen uintikeskus}},<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.urheiluhallit.fi/en/locations/makelanrinne.html|title=Mäkelänrinne Swimming Centre - Official Site|website=Urheiluhallit.fi|access-date=16 December 2021|archive-date=26 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210226191745/https://www.urheiluhallit.fi/en/locations/makelanrinne.html}}</ref> two inland swimming pools and more than 20 [[beach]]es, of which [[Hietaniemi Beach]] is probably the most famous.<ref>[http://www.hel.fi/www/liv/fi/palvelut/liikuntaviraston-toimipisteet Liikuntaviraston liikuntapaikat] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170502083821/http://www.hel.fi/www/liv/fi/palvelut/liikuntaviraston-toimipisteet |date=2 May 2017 }} (in Finnish)</ref>
Line 931: Line 945:
Until 2022 there also was an international services from Helsinki to Saint Petersburg and Moscow. The Saint Petersburg to Helsinki route was operated by [[Allegro (train)|Allegro high-speed trains]].
Until 2022 there also was an international services from Helsinki to Saint Petersburg and Moscow. The Saint Petersburg to Helsinki route was operated by [[Allegro (train)|Allegro high-speed trains]].


A [[Helsinki to Tallinn Tunnel]] has been proposed<ref>{{Cite news |date=6 January 2016 |title=Helsinki-Tallinn tunnel proposals look to bring cities closer than ever |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/06/helsinki-tallinn-tunnel-proposals-rail-link-finland-estonia}}</ref> and agreed upon by representatives of the cities.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Feargus O'Sullivan |date=7 January 2016 |title=Helsinki and Tallinn Agree to Build the World's Longest Underwater Rail Tunnel |work=CityLab |url=http://www.citylab.com/commute/2016/01/helsinki-tallinn-rail-tunnel-baltic/423030/}}</ref> The rail tunnel would connect Helsinki to the [[Estonia]]n capital [[Tallinn]], further linking Helsinki to the rest of continental Europe by [[Rail Baltica]].
A [[Helsinki to Tallinn Tunnel]] has been proposed<ref>{{Cite news |first=Gwyn |last=Topham|date=6 January 2016 |title=Helsinki-Tallinn tunnel proposals look to bring cities closer than ever |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/06/helsinki-tallinn-tunnel-proposals-rail-link-finland-estonia}}</ref> and agreed upon by representatives of the cities.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Feargus O'Sullivan |date=7 January 2016 |title=Helsinki and Tallinn Agree to Build the World's Longest Underwater Rail Tunnel |work=CityLab |url=http://www.citylab.com/commute/2016/01/helsinki-tallinn-rail-tunnel-baltic/423030/ |access-date=8 July 2016 }}</ref> The rail tunnel would connect Helsinki to the [[Estonia]]n capital [[Tallinn]], further linking Helsinki to the rest of continental Europe by [[Rail Baltica]].


===Aviation===
===Aviation===
Air traffic is handled primarily from [[Helsinki Airport]], located approximately {{convert|17|km|mi|0}} north of Helsinki's downtown area, in the neighbouring city of [[Vantaa]]. Helsinki's own airport, [[Helsinki-Malmi Airport]], is mainly used for general and private aviation. Charter flights are available from [[Hernesaari Heliport]].
Air traffic is handled primarily from [[Helsinki Airport]], located approximately {{convert|17|km|mi|0}} north of Helsinki's downtown area, in the neighbouring city of [[Vantaa]]. The now closed [[Helsinki-Malmi Airport]] used to handle general and private aviation. Charter flights are available from [[Hernesaari Heliport]].


===Sea transport===
===Sea transport===
Line 949: Line 963:
In the Helsinki metropolitan area, [[public transport]]ation is managed by the [[Helsinki Regional Transport Authority]], the metropolitan area transportation authority. The diverse [[Public transport in Helsinki|public transport system]] consists of [[Helsinki tram|trams]], [[VR commuter rail|commuter rail]], the [[Helsinki Metro|metro]], [[bus]] lines, two [[ferry]] lines and a [[Helsinki City Bikes|public bike system]].
In the Helsinki metropolitan area, [[public transport]]ation is managed by the [[Helsinki Regional Transport Authority]], the metropolitan area transportation authority. The diverse [[Public transport in Helsinki|public transport system]] consists of [[Helsinki tram|trams]], [[VR commuter rail|commuter rail]], the [[Helsinki Metro|metro]], [[bus]] lines, two [[ferry]] lines and a [[Helsinki City Bikes|public bike system]].


[[Trams in Helsinki|Helsinki's tram system]] dates back to 1891 when the first [[horse-drawn]] trams were introduced; the system was electrified in 1900.<ref>{{cite book| title= Otavan suuri ensyklopedia, 7. osa (Optiikka–Revontulet) | page= 5563 | chapter= Raitioliikenne | publisher= Otava | year= 1973 | isbn= 951-1-02232-6 | language= fi}}</ref> {{As of|2024|01}}, the system consists of 14 routes covering the inner part of the city center and [[Helsinki light rail line 15|one]] newer [[light rail]] style line connecting [[Keilaniemi]] in Espoo with [[Itäkeskus]] in eastern Helsinki. The length of the network is [[Planned tram projects in Helsinki|planned to more than double]] during the 2020s and 2030s compared to 2021, with major projects including [[Vantaa light rail]], the [[Crown Bridges]] link to the island of [[Laajasalo]] and the [[West Helsinki light rail]] project connecting [[Kannelmäki]] to the city center.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Salomaa |first=Marja |date=2021-05-29 |title=Helsingin ratikkavallankumous nostaa asuntojen hintoja lukuisilla alueilla, asuntosijoittaja vinkkaa sijoituskohteesta – "Hymyilyttää" |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000007985482.html |access-date=2023-08-02 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> Construction work on the new tram as the number line 13 (Nihti–Kalasatama–Vallilanlaakso–Pasila) has begun in May 2020, and the line is scheduled for completion in 2024.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/2718947|title=Ratikka kulkee Nihdistä Pasilaan vuonna 2024|work=Helsingin Uutiset|date=25 August 2020| access-date = 30 December 2020 | language = fi}}</ref>
[[Trams in Helsinki|Helsinki's tram system]] dates back to 1891 when the first [[horse-drawn]] trams were introduced; the system was electrified in 1900.<ref>{{cite book| title= Otavan suuri ensyklopedia, 7. osa (Optiikka–Revontulet) | page= 5563 | chapter= Raitioliikenne | publisher= Otava | year= 1973 | isbn= 951-1-02232-6 | language= fi}}</ref> {{As of|2024|01}}, the system consists of 14 routes covering the inner part of the city center and [[Helsinki light rail line 15|one]] newer [[light rail]] style line connecting [[Keilaniemi]] in Espoo with [[Itäkeskus]] in eastern Helsinki. The length of the network is [[Planned tram projects in Helsinki|planned to more than double]] during the 2020s and 2030s compared to 2021, with major projects including [[Vantaa light rail]], the [[Crown Bridges]] link to the island of [[Laajasalo]] and the [[West Helsinki light rail]] project connecting [[Kannelmäki]] to the city center.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Salomaa |first=Marja |date=2021-05-29 |title=Helsingin ratikkavallankumous nostaa asuntojen hintoja lukuisilla alueilla, asuntosijoittaja vinkkaa sijoituskohteesta – "Hymyilyttää" |trans-title=Helsinki's tram revolution is raising housing prices in numerous areas, real estate investor tips off an investment location – 'Makes me smile' |url=https://www.hs.fi/kaupunki/art-2000007985482.html |access-date=2023-08-02 |website=Helsingin Sanomat |language=fi}}</ref> Construction work on the new tram as the number line 13 (Nihti–Kalasatama–Vallilanlaakso–Pasila) has begun in May 2020, and the line is scheduled for completion in 2024.<ref>{{cite web |date=25 August 2020 |title=Ratikka kulkee Nihdistä Pasilaan vuonna 2024 |trans-title=The tram runs from Nihti to Pasila in 2024 |url=https://www.helsinginuutiset.fi/paikalliset/2718947 |access-date=30 December 2020 |work=Helsingin Uutiset |language=fi}}</ref>


The [[Helsinki commuter rail|commuter rail system]] includes purpose-built double track for local services in two rail corridors along intercity railways, and the [[Ring Rail Line]], an urban double-track railway with a station at the [[Helsinki Airport]] in Vantaa. Electric operation of commuter trains was first begun in 1969, and the system has been gradually expanded since. 15 different services are operated {{as of|2017|lc=yes}}, some extending outside of the Helsinki region. The frequent services run at a 10-minute headway in peak traffic.
The [[Helsinki commuter rail|commuter rail system]] includes purpose-built double track for local services in two rail corridors along intercity railways, and the [[Ring Rail Line]], an urban double-track railway with a station at the [[Helsinki Airport]] in Vantaa. Electric operation of commuter trains was first begun in 1969, and the system has been gradually expanded since. 15 different services are operated {{as of|2017|lc=yes}}, some extending outside of the Helsinki region. The frequent services run at a 10-minute headway in peak traffic.
Line 966: Line 980:
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Finland}}
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Finland}}


Helsinki has no official sister cities except [[Beijing]], China. On July 14, 2006, Beijing and Helsinki officially became sister cities. In October 2019, the two cities signed the Work Plan for Promoting the Cooperation between Beijing and Helsinki (19-2023).<ref>{{Cite web |title=City Profile |url=https://wb.beijing.gov.cn/en/sister_cities/sister_cities_of_beijing/european/european_helsinki/european_helsinki_city_profile/202007/t20200731_1968359.html#:~:text=%5BRelations%20with%20Beijing%5D%20On%20July,Helsinki%20(2019-2023) |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=wb.beijing.gov.cn}}</ref><ref name="pc" /><ref>{{cite web |last=Yan |first=Yangtze |date=14 July 2006 |title=Beijing, Helsinki forge sister city relationship |url=http://www.gov.cn/misc/2006-07/14/content_336339.htm |access-date=5 August 2013 |website=Gov.cn |publisher=Chinese Government |archive-date=9 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191009105714/http://www.gov.cn/misc/2006-07/14/content_336339.htm }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Sister Cities |url=http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn/Sister_Cities/Sister_City/ |access-date=23 June 2009 |publisher=Beijing Municipal Government |archive-date=16 February 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100216015454/http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn/Sister_Cities/Sister_City/ }}</ref> In addition, the city has a special partnership relation with:
Helsinki has no official sister cities except [[Beijing]], China. On July 14, 2006, Beijing and Helsinki officially became sister cities. In October 2019, the two cities signed the Work Plan for Promoting the Cooperation between Beijing and Helsinki (2019–23).<ref>{{Cite web |title=City Profile |url=https://wb.beijing.gov.cn/en/sister_cities/sister_cities_of_beijing/european/european_helsinki/european_helsinki_city_profile/202007/t20200731_1968359.html#:~:text=%5BRelations%20with%20Beijing%5D%20On%20July,Helsinki%20(2019-2023) |access-date=2024-02-25 |website=wb.beijing.gov.cn}}</ref><ref name="pc" /><ref>{{cite web |last=Yan |first=Yangtze |date=14 July 2006 |title=Beijing, Helsinki forge sister city relationship |url=http://www.gov.cn/misc/2006-07/14/content_336339.htm |access-date=5 August 2013 |website=Gov.cn |publisher=Chinese Government |archive-date=9 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191009105714/http://www.gov.cn/misc/2006-07/14/content_336339.htm }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Sister Cities |url=http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn/Sister_Cities/Sister_City/ |access-date=23 June 2009 |publisher=Beijing Municipal Government |archive-date=16 February 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100216015454/http://www.ebeijing.gov.cn/Sister_Cities/Sister_City/ }}</ref> In addition, the city has a special partnership relation with:


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Until 2022, Helsinki also had an international partnership with the Russian cities of [[Moscow]] and [[Saint Petersburg]], which was suspended after [[Russian invasion of Ukraine]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Helsinki varautuu Ukrainan sodan vaikutuksiin |url=https://www.hel.fi/fi/uutiset/helsinki-varautuu-ukrainan-sodan-vaikutuksiin |website=Helsingin kaupunki|date=10 October 2022 }}</ref>
Until 2022, Helsinki also had an international partnership with the Russian cities of [[Moscow]] and [[Saint Petersburg]], which was suspended after [[Russian invasion of Ukraine]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=10 October 2022 |title=Helsinki varautuu Ukrainan sodan vaikutuksiin |trans-title=Helsinki prepares for the effects of the war in Ukraine |url=https://www.hel.fi/fi/uutiset/helsinki-varautuu-ukrainan-sodan-vaikutuksiin |website=Helsingin kaupunki |language=fi}}</ref>


==Notable people==
==Notable people==
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== See also ==
== See also ==
{{Portal|Finland|Europe|Geography|Cities}}
{{Portal|Finland|Europe|Geography|Cities}}
* {{slink|Timeline of Helsinki|Bibliography}}
* {{section link|Timeline of Helsinki|Bibliography}}
* [[Helsinki metropolitan area]]
* [[Helsinki metropolitan area]]
* [[Helsinki urban area]]
* [[Helsinki urban area]]
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*[https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en My Helsinki: Your local guide to Helsinki]
*[https://www.myhelsinki.fi/en My Helsinki: Your local guide to Helsinki]
*[https://www.visitfinland.com/en/places-to-go/helsinki-region/helsinki-city/ Visit Finland: Discover Helsinki]
*[https://www.visitfinland.com/en/places-to-go/helsinki-region/helsinki-city/ Visit Finland: Discover Helsinki]
*[https://yle.fi/t/18-194469/en Helsinki] at [[Yle News]]


{{Inline audio}}
{{Inline audio}}

Latest revision as of 20:53, 12 December 2025

Template:Short description Template:Hatnote group Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. HelsinkiTemplate:Efn (Template:Langx)Template:Efn is the capital and most populous city in Finland. It is on the shore of the Gulf of Finland and is the seat of southern Finland's Uusimaa region. About Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". people live in the municipality, with Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". million in the capital region and Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". million in the metropolitan area. As the most populous urban area in Finland, it is the country's most significant centre for politics, education, finance, culture, and research. Helsinki is Script error: No such module "convert". north of Tallinn, Estonia, Script error: No such module "convert". east of Stockholm, Sweden, and Script error: No such module "convert". west of Saint Petersburg, Russia.

Together with the cities of Espoo, Vantaa and Kauniainen—and surrounding commuter towns,[1] including the neighbouring municipality of Sipoo to the east[2]—Helsinki forms a metropolitan area. This area is often considered Finland's only metropolis and is the world's northernmost metropolitan area with over one million inhabitants. Additionally, it is the northernmost capital of an EU member state. Helsinki is the third-largest municipality in the Nordic countries, after Stockholm and Oslo. Its urban area is the third-largest in the Nordic countries, after Stockholm and Copenhagen. Helsinki Airport, in the neighbouring city of Vantaa, serves the city with frequent flights to numerous destinations in Europe, North America, and Asia.

Helsinki is a bilingual municipality with Finnish and Swedish as its official languages. The population consists of Template:Pct Finnish speakers, Template:Pct Swedish speakers, and Template:Pct speakers of other languages.[3]

Helsinki has hosted the 1952 Summer Olympics, the first CSCE/OSCE Summit in 1975, the first World Athletics Championships in 1983, the 52nd Eurovision Song Contest in 2007 and it was the 2012 World Design Capital.[4] The city is recognized as a "Design City" in 2014 by UNESCO's Creative Cities Network.[5]

Helsinki has one of the highest standards of urban living in the world. In 2011, the British magazine Monocle ranked Helsinki as the world's most liveable city in its livable cities index.[6] In the Economist Intelligence Unit's 2016 livability survey, Helsinki ranked ninth out of 140 cities.[7] In July 2021, the American magazine Time named Helsinki one of the world's greatest places, a city that "can grow into a burgeoning cultural nest in the future" and is already known as an environmental pioneer.[8] In an international Cities of Choice survey conducted in 2021 by the Boston Consulting Group and the BCG Henderson Institute, Helsinki was ranked the third-best city in the world to live in, with London and New York City coming in first and second.[9][10] In the Condé Nast Traveler magazine's 2023 Readers' Choice Awards, Helsinki was ranked the 4th-friendliest city in Europe.[11] Helsinki, along with Rovaniemi in Lapland, is also one of Finland's most important tourist cities.[12] Due to the large number of sea passengers, Helsinki is classified as a major port city,[13] and in 2017 it was rated the world's busiest passenger port.[14]

Etymology

The origin of the name is uncertain. According to a theory put forward in the 1630s, at the time of Swedish colonisation of the Finnish coast, colonists from Hälsingland in central Sweden arrived at what is now the Vantaa River and called it Script error: No such module "Lang". ('Helsinge River'), giving rise to the names of the village and church of Helsinge in the 1300s.[15] This theory is questionable, as dialect research suggests that the settlers came from Uppland and the surrounding areas.[16] Others have suggested that the name derives from the Swedish word Script error: No such module "Lang"., an archaic form of the word Script error: No such module "Lang". ('neck'), which refers to the narrowest part of a river, the rapids.[17] Other Scandinavian towns in similar geographical locations were given similar names at the time, such as Helsingør in Denmark and Helsingborg in Sweden.

When a town was founded in the village of Forsby (later Script error: No such module "Lang".) in 1548, it was called Script error: No such module "Lang"., 'Helsinge rapids'. The name refers to the Template:Ill rapids at the mouth of the river.[18] The town was commonly known as Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang"., from which the modern Finnish name is derived.[19]

Official Finnish government documents and Finnish language newspapers have used the name Helsinki since 1819, when the Senate of Finland moved to the city from Turku, the former capital of Finland. Decrees issued in Helsinki were dated with Helsinki as the place of issue. This is how the form Helsinki came to be used in written Finnish.[20] When Finland became the Grand Duchy of Finland, an autonomous state under the rule of the Russian Empire, Helsinki was known as Script error: No such module "lang". (Script error: No such module "Lang".) in Russian, because the main and official language of the Grand Duchy of Finland was Swedish.

In Helsinki slang, the city is called Script error: No such module "Lang". (from the Swedish word Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning 'city'). Abbreviated form Script error: No such module "Lang". is equally common, but its use is associated with people of rural origin ("junantuomat", lit. "brought by a train") and frowned upon by locals.[21][22] Script error: No such module "Lang". is the Northern Sami name for Helsinki.[23]

History

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File:Helsinki 1820.jpg
Central Helsinki in 1820 before rebuilding. Illustration by Carl Ludvig Engel.
File:Suomenlinna Susisaari.jpg
Construction of Suomenlinna, the largest European sea fortress of its era, began in 1748.

Early history

After the end of the Ice Age and the retreat of the ice sheet, the first settlers arrived in the Helsinki area around 5000 BC. Their presence has been documented by archaeologists in Vantaa, Pitäjänmäki and Kaarela.[24] Permanent settlements did not appear until the beginning of the 1st millennium AD, during the Iron Age, when the area was inhabited by the Tavastians. They used the area for fishing and hunting, but due to the lack of archaeological finds it is difficult to say how extensive their settlements were. Pollen analysis has shown that there were agricultural settlements in the area in the 10th century, and surviving historical records from the 14th century describe Tavastian settlements in the area.[25]

Christianity does not gain a significant foothold in Finland before the 11th century. After that, a number of crosses and other objects related to Christianity can be found in archaeological material. According to the traditional view, the Kingdom of Sweden made three crusades to Finland, thanks to which the region was incorporated into both Christianity and the Swedish Empire. Recent research has shown that these expeditions, to the extent that there were even three of them, were not the crusades that had been imagined. Later, the conquest of Finland was justified in terms of "civilisation" and "christianisation", and the myth of the Crusades was developed. It is more likely that it was a multidimensional combination of economic, cultural and political power ambitions.[26]

The early settlements were raided by Vikings until 1008, and the Battle at Herdaler was a battle between the Norse Viking leader Olav Haraldsson (later King Olaf II of Norway, also known as Saint Olaf) and local Finns at Herdaler (now Ingå), not far from Helsinga, around 1007–1008.[27] The Saga of Olaf Haraldson tells how Olav raided the coasts of Finland and was almost killed in battle. He ran away in fear and after that the Vikings did not raid the coasts of Finland.[28][29]

Later the area was settled by Christians from Sweden. They came mainly from the Swedish coastal regions of Norrland and Hälsingland, and their migration intensified around 1100.[24] The Swedes permanently colonised the Helsinki region's coastline in the late 13th century, after the successful crusade to Finland that led to the defeat of the Tavastians.[30][25]

In the Middle Ages, the Helsinki area was a landscape of small villages. Some of the old villages from the 1240s in the area of present-day Helsinki, such as Koskela and Töölö, are now Helsinki districts, as are the rest of the 27 medieval villages. The area gradually became part of the Kingdom of Sweden and Christianity. Kuninkaantie, or the "King's Road", ran through the area and two interesting medieval buildings were built here: Template:Ill in the 1380s and the Church of St. Lawrence in 1455. In the Middle Ages, several thousand people lived in Helsinki's keep.[31]

There was a lot of trade across the Baltic Sea. The shipping route to the coast, and especially to Reval, meant that by the end of the Middle Ages the Helsinki region had become an important trading centre for wealthy peasants, priests and nobles in Finland, after Vyborg and Pohja. Furs, wood, tar, fish and animals were exported from Helsinki, and salt and grain were brought to the fortress. Helsinki was also the most important cattle-breeding area in Uusimaa. With the help of trade, Helsinki became one of the wealthiest cities in Finland and Uusimaa. Thanks to trade and travel, e.g. to Reval, people could speak several languages, at least helpfully. Depending on the situation, Finnish, Swedish, Latin or Low German could be heard in the Helsinki area.[32]

Written chronicles from 1417 mention the village of Koskela near the rapids at the mouth of the River Vantaa, where Helsinki was to be founded.[24]

Founding of Helsinki

File:Helsinki Map 1645.png
A map of Helsinki in 1645

Helsinki was founded by King Gustav I of Sweden on 12 June 1550 as a trading town called Helsingfors to rival the Hanseatic city of Reval (now Tallinn) on the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland.[33][24] To populate the new town at the mouth of the Vantaa River, the king ordered the bourgeoisie of Porvoo, Raseborg, Rauma and Ulvila to move there.[34] The shallowness of the bay made it impossible to build a harbour, and the king allowed the settlers to leave the unfortunate location. In 1640, Count Per Brahe the Younger, together with some descendants of the original settlers, moved the centre of the city to the Vironniemi peninsula by the sea, today's Kruununhaka district, where the Senate Square and Helsinki Cathedral are located.[35]

During the second half of the 17th century, Helsinki, as a wooden city, suffered from regular fires, and by the beginning of the 18th century the population had fallen below 1,700. For a long time Helsinki was mainly a small administrative town for the governors of Nyland and Tavastehus County, but its importance began to grow in the 18th century when plans were made to build a more solid naval defence in front of the city.[34] Little came of these plans, however, as Helsinki remained a small town plagued by poverty, war and disease. The plague of 1710 killed most of Helsinki's population.[33] After the Russians captured Helsinki in May 1713 during the Great Northern War, the retreating Swedish administration set fire to parts of the city.[36][37] Despite this, the city's population grew to 3,000 by the beginning of the 19th century. The construction of the naval fortress of Sveaborg (Viapori in Finnish, now also called Suomenlinna) in the 18th century helped to improve Helsinki's status. However, it wasn't until Russia defeated Sweden in the Finnish War and annexed Finland as the autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland in 1809 that the city began to develop into a substantial city. The Russians besieged the Sveaborg fortress during the war, and about a quarter of the city was destroyed in a fire in 1808.[38]

Emperor Alexander I of Russia moved the capital of Finland from Turku to Helsinki on 8 April 1812 to reduce Swedish influence in Finland and bring the capital closer to St Petersburg.[39][40][41] After the Great Fire of Turku in 1827, the Royal Academy of Turku, the only university in the country at the time, was also moved to Helsinki and eventually became the modern University of Helsinki. The move consolidated the city's new role and helped set it on a path of continuous growth. This transformation is most evident in the city centre, which was rebuilt in the neoclassical style to resemble St. Petersburg, largely according to a plan by the German-born architect C. L. Engel. As elsewhere, technological advances such as the railway and industrialisation were key factors in the city's growth.

Twentieth century

By the 1910s, Helsinki's population was already over 100,000, and despite the turbulence of Finnish history in the first half of the 20th century, Helsinki continued to grow steadily. This included the Finnish Civil War and the Winter War, both of which left their mark on the city. At the beginning of the 20th century, there were roughly equal numbers of Finnish and Swedish speakers in Helsinki; the majority of workers were Finnish-speaking. The local Helsinki slang (or stadin slangi) developed among Finnish children and young people from the 1890s as a mixed Finnish-Swedish language, with influences from German and Russian, and from the 1950s the slang began to become more Finnish.[42] A landmark event was the 1952 Olympic Games, which were held in Helsinki. Finland's rapid urbanisation in the 1970s, which occurred late compared to the rest of Europe, tripled the population of the metropolitan area, and the Helsinki Metro subway system was built and put into operation in 1982.[43]

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Geography

File:Helsinki by Sentinel-2, 2020-06-26.jpg
Helsinki seen from Sentinel-2

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Known as the "Daughter of the Baltic"[44] or the "Pearl of the Baltic",[45][46] Helsinki is located at the tip of a peninsula and on 315 islands. The city centre is located on a southern peninsula, Helsinginniemi ("Cape of Helsinki"), which is rarely referred to by its actual name, Vironniemi ("Cape of Estonia"). Population density is comparatively high in certain parts of downtown Helsinki, reaching Script error: No such module "convert". in the district of Kallio, overall Helsinki's population density is 3,147 per square kilometre. Outside the city centre, much of Helsinki consists of post-war suburbs separated by patches of forest. A narrow, Script error: No such module "convert". long Helsinki Central Park, which stretches from the city centre to Helsinki's northern border, is an important recreational area for residents. The City of Helsinki has about 11,000 boat moorings and over Script error: No such module "convert". of marine fishing waters adjacent to the capital region. About 60 species of fish are found in this area, and recreational fishing is popular.

Helsinki's main islands include Seurasaari, Lauttasaari and Korkeasaari – the latter is home to Finland's largest zoo, Korkeasaari Zoo. The former military islands of Vallisaari and Isosaari are now open to the public, but Santahamina is still in military use. The most historic and remarkable island is the fortress of Suomenlinna (Sveaborg).[47] The island of Pihlajasaari is a popular summer resort, comparable to Fire Island in New York City.

There are 60 nature reserves in Helsinki with a total area of Script error: No such module "convert".. Of the total area, Script error: No such module "convert". are water areas and Script error: No such module "convert". are land areas. The city also has seven nature reserves in Espoo, Sipoo, Hanko and Ingå. The largest nature reserve is the Vanhankaupunginselkä, with an area of Script error: No such module "convert".. The city's first nature reserve, Tiiraluoto of Lauttasaari, was established in 1948.[48]

Helsinki's official plant is the Norway maple and its official animal is the red squirrel.[49]

Metropolitan area

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File:Greater Helsinki Urban Area.svg
Helsinki central urban area, an officially recognized urban area
File:A map of the Capital region and Greater Helsinki in Finland.svg
A map of Helsinki's capital region (in orange) and its sub-regional municipalities (in light orange)

The Helsinki capital region (Template:Langx, Template:Langx) comprises four municipalities: Helsinki, Espoo, Vantaa, and Kauniainen.[50] The Helsinki urban area is considered to be the only metropolis in Finland.[51] It has a population of about Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". million, and is the most densely populated area of Finland. The Capital Region spreads over a land area of Script error: No such module "convert". and has a population density of 1,619 per km². With over 20 percent of the country's population in just 0.2 percent of its surface area, the area's housing density is high by Finnish standards.

The Helsinki metropolitan area or the Greater Helsinki consists of the cities of the capital region and ten surrounding municipalities: Hyvinkää, Järvenpää, Kerava, Kirkkonummi, Nurmijärvi, Sipoo, Tuusula, Pornainen, Mäntsälä and Vihti.[52] The Metropolitan Area covers Script error: No such module "convert". and has a population of about Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". million, or about a fourth of the total population of Finland. The metropolitan area has a high concentration of employment: approximately 750,000 jobs.[53] Despite the intensity of land use, the region also has large recreational areas and green spaces. The Helsinki metropolitan area is the world's northernmost urban area with a population of over one million people, and the northernmost EU capital city.

The Helsinki urban area is an officially recognized urban area in Finland, defined by its population density. The area stretches throughout 11 municipalities, and is the largest such area in Finland, with a land area of Script error: No such module "convert". and approximately 1.36 million inhabitants.

Climate

Helsinki has a cold hemiboreal humid continental climate (Köppen: Dfb, Trewartha Dcbo).[54] Due to the moderating influence of the Baltic Sea and the North Atlantic Current (see also Extratropical cyclone), winter temperatures are higher than the northern location would suggest, with an average of Script error: No such module "convert". in January and February.[55]

Winters in Helsinki are significantly warmer than in the north of Finland, and the snow season in the capital is much shorter due to its location in the extreme south of Finland and the urban heat island effect. Temperatures below Script error: No such module "convert". occur only a few times a year. However, due to the latitude, the days around the winter solstice are 5 hours and 48 minutes long, with the sun very low (at noon the sun is just over 6 degrees in the sky), and the cloudy weather at this time of year exacerbates the darkness. Conversely, Helsinki enjoys long days in summer, with 18 hours and 57 minutes of daylight around the summer solstice.[56]

The average maximum temperature from June to August is around Script error: No such module "convert".. Due to the sea effect, especially on hot summer days, daytime temperatures are slightly cooler and nighttime temperatures higher than further inland. The highest temperature recorded in the city was Script error: No such module "convert". on 28 July 2019 at the Kaisaniemi weather station,[57] breaking the previous record of Script error: No such module "convert". set in July 1945 at the Ilmala weather station.[58] The lowest temperature recorded in the city was Script error: No such module "convert". on 10 January 1987, although an unofficial low of Script error: No such module "convert". was recorded in December 1876.[59] Helsinki Airport (in Vantaa, 17 km north of Helsinki city centre) recorded a maximum temperature of Script error: No such module "convert". on 29 July 2010 and a minimum of Script error: No such module "convert". on 9 January 1987. Precipitation comes from frontal passages and thunderstorms. Thunderstorms are most common in summer.

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Neighbourhoods and other subdivisions

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Helsinki is divided into three major areas: Helsinki City Centre (Template:Langx, Template:Langx), North Helsinki (Template:Langx, Template:Langx) and East Helsinki (Template:Langx, Template:Langx). Of these, Helsinki City Centre means the undefined core area of capital, as opposed to suburbs. The designations business center and city center usually refer to Kluuvi, Kamppi and Punavuori.[60][61] Other subdivisional centers outside the downtown area include Malmi (Template:Langx),[62][63] located in the northeastern part of city, and Itäkeskus (Template:Langx),[64] in the eastern part of city.

Cityscape

Neoclassical and romantic nationalism trend

File:West side of Helsinki Cathedral in Kruununhaka, Helsinki, Finland, 2022 April.jpg
Helsinki Cathedral is among the most prominent buildings in the city
File:Hotel Kämp by Night in Winter - panoramio.jpg
Hotel Kämp, a luxury hotel in Helsinki, located in Kluuvi

Carl Ludvig Engel, appointed to plan a new city centre on his own, designed several neoclassical buildings in Helsinki. The focal point of Engel's city plan was the Senate Square. It is surrounded by the Government Palace (to the east), the main building of Helsinki University (to the west), and (to the north) the large Helsinki Cathedral, which was finished in 1852, twelve years after Engel's death. Helsinki's epithet, "The White City of the North", derives from this construction era. Most of Helsinki's older buildings were built after the 1808 fire; before that time, the oldest surviving building in the center of Helsinki is the Sederholm House (1757) at the intersection of Senate Square and the Katariinankatu street.[35] Suomenlinna also has buildings completed in the 18th century, including the Kuninkaanportti on the Kustaanmiekka Island (1753–1754).[65] The oldest church in Helsinki is the Östersundom church, built in 1754.[66]

Helsinki is also home to numerous Art Nouveau-influenced (Jugend in Finnish) buildings belonging to the Kansallisromantiikka (romantic nationalism) trend, designed in the early 20th century and strongly influenced by Kalevala, which was a common theme of the era. Helsinki's Art Nouveau style is also featured in central residential districts, such as Katajanokka and Ullanlinna.[67] An important architect of the Finnish Art Nouveau style was Eliel Saarinen, whose architectural masterpiece was the Helsinki Central Station. Opposite the Bank of Finland building is the Renaissance Revivalish the House of the Estates (1891).[68]

The only visible public buildings of the Gothic Revival architecture in Helsinki are St. John's Church (1891) in Ullanlinna, which is the largest stone church in Finland, and its twin towers rise to 74 meters and have 2,600 seats.[69] Other examples of neo-Gothic include the House of Nobility in Kruununhaka and the Catholic St. Henry's Cathedral.[70][71]

In addition to other cities in Northern Europe that were not under the Soviet Union, such as Stockholm, Sweden, Helsinki's neoclassical buildings gained also popularity as a backdrop for scenes intended to depict the Soviet Union in numerous Hollywood movies during the Cold War era, when filming within the actual USSR was not possible. Some of them, including The Kremlin Letter (1970), Reds (1981), and Gorky Park (1983).[72] were possible due to such Russian cities as Leningrad and Moscow also having similar neoclassical architecture. At the same time due to Cold War and Finnish relations with the USSR the government secretly instructed Finnish officials not to extend assistance to such film projects.[73] The city has large numbers of underground areas such as shelters and tunnels, many used daily as swimming pool, church, water management, entertainment etc.[74][75][76]

Functionalism and modern architecture

File:Aleksanterinkatu - January 2018.jpg
Aleksanterinkatu at Christmas time
File:Oodi July 2019 2.jpg
The Oodi library is getting attention around the world.[47]

Helsinki also features several buildings by Finnish architect Alvar Aalto,[47] recognized as one of the pioneers of architectural functionalism. However, some of his works, such as the headquarters of the paper company Stora Enso and the concert venue Finlandia Hall, have been subject to divided opinions from the citizens.[77][78][79]

Functionalist buildings in Helsinki by other architects include the Olympic Stadium, the Tennis Palace, the Rowing Stadium, the Swimming Stadium, the Velodrome, the Glass Palace, the Töölö Sports Hall, and Helsinki-Malmi Airport. The sports venues were built to serve the 1940 Helsinki Olympic Games; the games were initially cancelled due to the Second World War, but the venues fulfilled their purpose in the 1952 Olympic Games. Many of them are listed by DoCoMoMo as significant examples of modern architecture. The Olympic Stadium and Helsinki-Malmi Airport are also catalogued by the Finnish Heritage Agency as cultural-historical environments of national significance.[80][81] The Linnanmäki Amusement Park, owned by the non-profit Template:Ill, was opened in 1950.[82]

File:Kalasatama in Sörnäinen, Helsinki, Finland, 2023 September – 06.jpg
Residential towers of Kalasatama. The Script error: No such module "convert". Majakka has been built on top of the Redi shopping centre. It is currently Finland's tallest building.

When Finland became heavily urbanized in the 1960s and 1970s, the district of Pihlajamäki, for example, was built in Helsinki for new residents, where for the first time in Finland, precast concrete was used on a large scale. Pikku Huopalahti, built in the 1980s and 1990s, has tried to get rid of a one-size-fits-all grid pattern, which means that its look is very organic and its streets are not repeated in the same way. Itäkeskus in Eastern Helsinki was the first regional center in the 1980s.[83] Efforts have also been made to protect Helsinki in the late 20th century, and many old buildings have been renovated.[83] Modern architecture is represented, for example, by the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma,[47] which consists of two straight and curved-walled parts, though this style strongly divided the opinions from the citizens.[79] Next to Kiasma is the glass-walled Sanomatalo (1999).

There have been many plans to build highrise buildings in Helsinki since the 1920s when architect Eliel Saarinen proposed the 85-meter-tall Kalevalatalo in 1921, but few tall buildings were built until the 21st century.[84] In 1924 Oiva Kallio won Etu-Töölö competition with his plan (several 14- to 16-story buildings).[85] A 32-story city hall was also proposed.[86] Other plans of the 1930s included the 18-story "Kino" palace, a 17-story apartment building, and a 30-story[87] Stockmann building were proposed but only the 70-meter-tall 14-story Hotel Torni was built.[88] (Hotel Torni was the tallest high-rise in Finland until 1976, when the 83-meter-tall Neste headquarters were completed in Espoo; Helsinki had rejected the tower.[89]) Twin 30-story buildings were proposed in Pasila in the 1970s but were rejected.[87] In 1990 a planned 104-meter-tall tower[90][91] for the Kone company was also cancelled.

Highrise construction only started in the beginning of the 21st century, when the city decided to allow the construction of skyscrapers. Highrises were first built in Kalasatama, a primarily-residential district built on a former container port. As of 2024, four residential towers have been completed: the 35-story, 282-apartment, Script error: No such module "convert". Script error: No such module "Lang". in 2019 (which is the tallest building in Finland); the 32-story, 124-meter Script error: No such module "Lang". in 2021; the 31-story, 120-meter Script error: No such module "Lang". One in 2022; and the 24-story, 98-meter Script error: No such module "Lang". in 2023. The 26-story, 111-meter-tall office building Script error: No such module "Lang". is to be completed in 2025, and three further towers are to be built in the complex.[92][93][94] Tall residential towers have also been built in the eastern district of Vuosaari: the 87-meter, 26-story Cirrus was completed in 2006, the 24-story, 85-meter-tall Script error: No such module "Lang". was completed in 2023 and the 33-story, 288-apartment, 120-meter-tall Script error: No such module "Lang". is due to be completed in late 2024.[95]

Skyscrapers have also be planned in the Pasila area, with a handful of over-100-meter-tall towers in various stages of planning or early construction as of 2024.[96][97][98][99][100] In Jätkäsaari, a 113-meter-tall hotel and a 24-story residential tower have been approved.[101] 121- and 93-meter-tall office buildings are planned to be built in Ruoholahti.[102] Well over 200 high-rise buildings will be built in Helsinki in the 2020s.[103]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The freshest building styles in Helsinki also include low-carbon economy; for example, the white-colored Katajanokan Laituri building that opened in Katajanokka in the summer of 2024 is built from Finnish and Swedish wood. This building includes eco-friendly hotel Solo Sokos Pier 4.[104]

Statues and sculptures

File:11-07-29-helsinki-by-RalfR-149.jpg
A statue of Alexander II of Russia, the Grand Duke of Finland, by Walter Runeberg and Template:Ill and erected in 1894. He was a well regarded emperor among the majority of Finns at the time.[105]

Well-known statues and monuments strongly embedded in the cityscape of Helsinki include the Keisarinnankivi ("Stone of the Empress", 1835), the statue of Russian Emperor Alexander II (1894), the fountain sculpture Havis Amanda (1908), the Paavo Nurmi statue (1925), the Three Smiths Statue (1932), the Aleksis Kivi Memorial (1939), the Eino Leino Statue (1953), the Equestrian statue of Marshal Mannerheim (1960) and the Sibelius Monument (1967).[106]

Government

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File:Helsinki City Hall - DSC03930.JPG
The Helsinki City Hall houses the City Council of Helsinki.

As is the case with all Finnish municipalities, Helsinki's city council is the main decision-making organ in local politics, dealing with issues such as urban planning, schools, health care, and public transport. The council is chosen in the nationally held municipal elections, which are held every four years.

Helsinki's city council consists of eighty-five members. Following the most recent municipal elections in 2025, the three largest parties are the National Coalition Party (21), the Social Democratic Party (21), and the Green League (16).[107]

The Mayor of Helsinki is Daniel Sazonov.[108]

Demographics

Population

<templatestyles src="Module:Historical populations/styles.css"/>Script error: No such module "Historical populations". The city of Helsinki has Template:Data Finland municipality/population count inhabitants, making it the most populous municipality in Finland and the third in the Nordics. The Helsinki region is the largest urbanised area in Finland with Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[". inhabitants. The city of Helsinki is home to 12% of Finland's population. 20.8% of the population has a foreign background, which is twice above the national average. However, it is lower than in the major Finnish cities of Espoo or Vantaa.[3]

At 53 percent of the population, women form a greater proportion of Helsinki residents than the national average of 51 percent. Helsinki's population density of 3,147 people per square kilometre makes Helsinki the most densely populated city in Finland. The life expectancy for men and women is slightly below the national averages: 75.1 years for men as compared to 75.7 years, 81.7 years for women as compared to 82.5 years.[109][110]

Helsinki has experienced strong growth since the 1810s, when it replaced Turku as the capital of the Grand Duchy of Finland, which later became the sovereign Republic of Finland. The city continued its growth from that time on, with an exception during the Finnish Civil War. From the end of World War II up until the 1970s there was a massive exodus of people from the countryside to the cities of Finland, in particular Helsinki. Between 1944 and 1969 the population of the city nearly doubled from 275,000[111] to 525,600.[112]

In the 1960s, the population growth of Helsinki began to decrease, mainly due to a lack of housing.[113] Some residents began to move to the neighbouring cities of Espoo and Vantaa, resulting in increased population growth in both municipalities. Espoo's population increased ninefold in sixty years, from 22,874 people in 1950 to 244,353 in 2009.[114] Vantaa saw an even more dramatic change in the same time span: from 14,976 in 1950 to 197,663 in 2009, a thirteenfold increase. These population changes prompted the municipalities of metropolitan area into more intense cooperation in areas such as public transportation[115] – resulting in the foundation of HSL – and waste management.[116] The increasing scarcity of housing and the higher costs of living in the capital region have pushed many daily commuters to find housing in formerly rural areas, and even further, to cities such as Lohja, Hämeenlinna, Lahti, and Porvoo.

Template:Bar chart

Language

Template:Pie chart The city of Helsinki is officially bilingual, with both Finnish and Swedish as official languages. since 2024Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., the majority of the population, Template:Data Finland municipality/native language Finnish persons (Script error: No such module "Percentage".), spoke Finnish as their first language. The number of Swedish speakers was Template:Data Finland municipality/native language Swedish persons (Script error: No such module "Percentage".) of the population.

In addition, the number of people who speak Sámi, Finland's third official language, was only Template:Data Finland municipality/native language Sami persons (Script error: No such module "Percentage".) of the population. Although few people speak the Sámi languages as their mother tongue, there are 527 people of Sami origin.[117] There are 93 Tatar speakers in Helsinki, almost half of the total number of Tatar speakers in Finland.

Helsinki slang is a regional dialect of the city. Historically, it was a combination of Finnish and Swedish, with influences from Russian and German. Nowadays it has a strong English influence. Today, however, Finnish is the common language of communication between Finnish speakers, Swedish speakers and speakers of other languages (New Finns) in everyday public life between strangers.[118][119]

The city of Helsinki and the national authorities have specifically targeted Swedish speakers. Knowledge of Finnish is essential in business and is usually a basic requirement in the labour market.[120] Swedish speakers are most concentrated in the southern parts of the city. The district with the most Swedish speakers is Ullanlinna/Ulrikasborg with 2,098 (19.6%), while Template:Ill is the only district where Swedish is the majority language (at 82.8%). The number of Swedish speakers decreased every year until 2008, and has increased every year since then. Since 2007, the number of Swedish speakers has increased by 2,351.[121] In 1890, Finnish speakers overtook Swedish speakers to become the majority of the city's population.[122] At that time, the population of Helsinki was 61,530.[123]

Foreign languages were spoken by Template:Pct of the population.[3] As English and Swedish are compulsory school subjects, functional bilingualism or trilingualism acquired through language studies is not uncommon. At least 160 different languages are spoken in Helsinki. since 2024Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., the most common foreign languages are Russian (3.1%), Somali (2.2%), Arabic (1.6%), English (1.5%), Estonian (1.4%), Chinese (0.7%) and Persian (0.7%).[3]

Immigration

Population by country of birth (2024)[3]
Nationality Population %
File:Flag of Finland.svg Finland 558,876 77.9
File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union 14,604 2.1
File:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia 9,979 1.5
File:Flag of Somalia.svg Somalia 7,873 1.2
File:Flag of Iraq.svg Iraq 6,377 0.9
File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China 4,635 0.7
File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia 4,621 0.7
File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden 3,658 0.5
File:Flag of the Philippines.svg Philippines 3,488 0.5
File:Flag of India.svg India 3,321 0.5
File:Flag of Nepal.svg   Nepal 3,087 0.5
Other 63,499 9.3

since 2024Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., there were 142,296 people with an immigrant background living in Helsinki, or 21% of the population.Template:Efn There were 125,142 residents who were born abroad, or 18% of the population. The number of foreign citizens in Helsinki was 84,396.[3]

The relative share of immigrants in Helsinki's population is twice the national average, and the city's new residents are increasingly of foreign origin.[3] This will increase the proportion of foreign residents in the coming years. As a crossroads of many international ports and Finland's largest airport, Helsinki is the global gateway to and from Finland.

Most foreign-born citizens come from the former Soviet Union, Estonia, Somalia, Iraq, China and Russia.[3]

Religion

In 2023, the Evangelical Lutheran Church was the largest religious group with 46.1% of the Helsinki population. Other religious groups made up 4.5% of the population. 49.4% of the population had no religious affiliation.[124]

The most important churches in Helsinki are Helsinki Cathedral (1852), Uspenski Cathedral (1868), St. John's Church (1891), Kallio Church (1912) and Temppeliaukio Church (1969).

There are 21 Lutheran congregations in Helsinki, 18 of which are Finnish-speaking and 3 are Swedish-speaking. These form Helsinki's congregationgroup. Outside that there is Finland's German congregation with 3,000 members and Rikssvenska Olaus Petri-församlingen for Swedish-citizens with 1,000 members.[125]

The largest Orthodox congregation is the Orthodox Church of Helsinki. It has 20,000 members. Its main church is the Uspenski Cathedral.[126] The two largest Catholic congregations are the Cathedral of Saint Henry, with 4,552 members, established in 1860 and St Mary's Catholic Parish, with 4,107 members, established in 1954.[127]

File:Helsinki Helsingfors Synagogue 02.png
Helsinki Synagogue in 2020

There are around 30 mosques in the Helsinki region. Many linguistic and ethnic groups such as Bangladeshis, Kosovars, Kurds and Bosniaks have established their own mosques.[128] The largest congregation in both Helsinki and Finland is the Template:Ill, established in 1995. It has over 2,800 members since 2017Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., and it received €24,131 in government assistance.[129]

In 2015, imam Template:Ill estimated that on big celebrations around 10,000 Muslims visit mosques.[130] In 2004, it was estimated that there were 8,000 Muslims in Helsinki, 1.5% of the population at the time.[131] The number of people in Helsinki with a background from Muslim majority countries was nearly 41,000 as of 2021, representing over 6% of the population.

The main synagogue of Helsinki is the Helsinki Synagogue from 1906, located in Kamppi. It has over 1,200 members, out of the 1,800 Jews in Finland, and it is the older of the two buildings in Finland originally built as a synagogue, followed by the Turku Synagogue in 1912.[132] The congregation includes a synagogue, Jewish kindergarten, school, library, Jewish meat shop, two Jewish cemeteries and an retirement home. Many Jewish organizations and societies are based there, and the synagogue publishes the main Jewish magazine in Finland, Template:Ill.[133]

Economy

File:Kamppi Center II.jpg
Kamppi Center, a shopping and transportation complex in Kamppi

Helsinki metropolitan area generates approximately one third of Finland's GDP. GDP per capita is roughly 1.3 times the national average.[134] Helsinki profits on serviced-related IT and public sectors. Having moved from heavy industrial works, shipping companies also employ a substantial number of people.[135]

The metropolitan area's gross value added per capita is 200% of the mean of 27 European metropolitan areas, equalling those of Stockholm and Paris. The gross value added annual growth has been around 4%.[136]

83 of the 100 largest Finnish companies have their headquarters in the metropolitan area. Two-thirds of the 200 highest-paid Finnish executives live in the metropolitan area and 42% in Helsinki. The average income of the top 50 earners was 1.65 million euro.[137]

The tap water is of excellent quality and it is supplied by the Template:Cvt Päijänne Water Tunnel, one of the world's longest continuous rock tunnels.[138]

Education

File:University of Helsinki, Main Building (52890870759).jpg
Main building of the University of Helsinki as seen from the Senate Square.
File:Haaga-Helia University Of Applied Sciences.png
Haaga-Helia University of Applied Sciences is the largest business polytechnic in Finland.

Helsinki has 190 comprehensive schools, 41 upper secondary schools, and 15 vocational institutes. Half of the 41 upper secondary schools are private or state-owned, the other half municipal. There are two major research universities in Helsinki, the University of Helsinki and Aalto University, and a number of other higher level institutions and polytechnics which focus on higher-level professional education.

Research universities

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Other institutions of higher education

Helsinki is one of the co-location centres of the Knowledge and Innovation Community (Future information and communication society) of The European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT).[139]

Culture

Museums

The biggest historical museum in Helsinki is the National Museum of Finland, which displays a vast collection from prehistoric times to the 21st century. The museum building itself, a national romantic-style neomedieval castle, is a tourist attraction. Another major historical museum is the Helsinki City Museum, which introduces visitors to Helsinki's 500-year history. The University of Helsinki also has many significant museums, including the Helsinki University Museum "Arppeanum" and the Finnish Museum of Natural History.

The Finnish National Gallery consists of three museums: Ateneum Art Museum for classical Finnish art, Sinebrychoff Art Museum for classical European art, and Kiasma Art Museum for modern art, in a building by architect Steven Holl. The old Ateneum, a neo-Renaissance palace from the 19th century, is one of the city's major historical buildings. All three museum buildings are state-owned through Senate Properties.

The city of Helsinki hosts its own art collection in the Helsinki Art Museum (HAM), primarily located in its Tennispalatsi gallery. Around 200 pieces of public art lie outside. The art is all city property.

Helsinki Art Museum will in 2020 launch the Helsinki Biennial, which will bring art to maritime Helsinki – in its first year to the island of Vallisaari.[140]

The Design Museum is devoted to the exhibition of both Finnish and foreign design, including industrial design, fashion, and graphic design. Other museums in Helsinki include the Military Museum of Finland, Didrichsen Art Museum, Amos Rex Art Museum, and the Template:Ill.

Theatres

File:Helsinki - Finnish National Theatre and the Finnish National Writer - panoramio.jpg
The Finnish National Theatre (1902), designed by architect Onni Tarjanne. In front of it, the memorial statue of Aleksis Kivi.

Helsinki has three major theatres: The Finnish National Theatre, the Helsinki City Theatre, and the Swedish Theatre (Svenska Teatern). Other notable theatres in the city include the Alexander Theatre, Template:Ill, Template:Ill, KOM-teatteri, and Template:Ill.

Music

Helsinki is home to two full-size symphony orchestras, the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra and the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, both of which perform at the Helsinki Music Centre concert hall. Acclaimed contemporary composers Kaija Saariaho, Magnus Lindberg, Esa-Pekka Salonen, and Einojuhani Rautavaara, among others, were born and raised in Helsinki, and studied at the Sibelius Academy. The Finnish National Opera, the only full-time, professional opera company in Finland, is located in Helsinki. The opera singer Martti Wallén, one of the company's long-time soloists, was born and raised in Helsinki, as was mezzo-soprano Monica Groop.

Many widely renowned and acclaimed bands have originated in Helsinki, including Children of Bodom, Hanoi Rocks, HIM, Stratovarius, The 69 Eyes, Finntroll, Ensiferum, Wintersun, The Rasmus, Poets of the Fall, and Apocalyptica. The most significant of the metal music events in Helsinki is the Tuska Open Air Metal Festival in Suvilahti, Sörnäinen.[141]

The city's main musical venues are the Finnish National Opera, the Finlandia concert hall, and the Helsinki Music Centre. The Music Centre also houses a part of the Sibelius Academy. Bigger concerts and events are usually held at one of the city's two big ice hockey arenas: the Helsinki Halli or the Helsinki Ice Hall. Helsinki has Finland's largest fairgrounds, the Messukeskus Helsinki, which is attended by more than a million visitors a year.[142]

Helsinki Arena hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2007, the first Eurovision Song Contest arranged in Finland, following Lordi's win in 2006.[143]

Art

File:"Havis Amanda", la statue de la fontaine de Vallgren (Helsinki) (2744386193).jpg
Havis Amanda, a fountain sculpture at the Helsinki Market Square

Helsinki Day (Helsinki-päivä) will be celebrated every 12 June, with numerous entertainment events culminating in an open-air concert.[144][145] Also, the Helsinki Festival is an arts and culture festival that takes place every August (including the Night of the Arts).[146]

At the Senate Square in fall 2010, Finland's largest open-air art exhibition to date took place: About 1.4 million people saw the international exhibition of United Buddy Bears.[147]

Helsinki was the 2012 World Design Capital, in recognition of the use of design as an effective tool for social, cultural, and economic development in the city. In choosing Helsinki, the World Design Capital selection jury highlighted Helsinki's use of 'Embedded Design', which has tied design in the city to innovation, "creating global brands, such as Nokia, Kone, and Marimekko, popular events, like the annual Template:Ill, outstanding education and research institutions, such as the Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, and exemplary architects and designers such as Eliel Saarinen and Alvar Aalto".[4]

Helsinki hosts many film festivals. Most of them are small venues, while some have generated interest internationally. The most prolific of these is the Helsinki International Film Festival – Love & Anarchy film festival, also known as Helsinki International Film Festival, which features films on a wide spectrum. Night Visions, on the other hand, focuses on genre cinema, screening horror, fantasy, and science fiction films in very popular movie marathons that last the entire night. Another popular film festival is Template:Ill, a festival that focuses solely on documentary cinema.[148][149][150]

Media

File:Sanomatalo - Helsinki - 13.9.2013.jpg
Sanomatalo, a current office building of Sanoma Corporation

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Sanoma publishes Finland's journal of record, Script error: No such module "Lang"., the tabloid Ilta-Sanomat, the commerce-oriented Taloussanomat, and the television channel Nelonen. Another Helsinki-based media house, Alma Media, publishes over thirty magazines, including the tabloid Iltalehti, and the commerce-oriented Kauppalehti.

Finland's national public-broadcasting institution Yle operates five television channels and thirteen radio channels in both national languages. Yle is headquartered in the neighbourhood of Pasila. All TV channels are broadcast digitally, both terrestrially and on cable. Yle's studio area houses the Script error: No such module "convert". high television and radio tower, Yle Transmission Tower (Pasilan linkkitorni),[151] which is the third tallest structure in Helsinki and one of Helsinki's most famous landmarks, from the top of which, in good weather, can be seen even as far as Tallinn over the Gulf of Finland.[152]

The commercial television channel MTV3 and commercial radio channel Radio Nova are owned by Nordic Broadcasting (Bonnier and Proventus).

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Food

File:Ekbergin kahvila ja leipomon myymälä- Bulevardi 9 - Kamppi - Helsinki - m.jpg
Café Ekberg, the oldest coffeehouse of Helsinki, along the Bulevardi in the Kamppi district

Helsinki was already known in the 18th century for its abundant number of inns and pubs, where both locals and those who landed in the harbor were offered plenty of alcoholic beverages.[153] At that time, taxes on the sale of alcohol were a very significant source of income for Helsinki, and one of the most important sellers of alcohol was Johan Sederholm (1722–1805), a trade councilor who attracted rural merchants with alcohol and made good deals.[153] Gradually, a new kind of beverage culture began to grow in the next century, and as early as 1852, the first café of Finland, Café Ekberg,[154][155] was established by confectioner Template:Ill (1825–1891) after attending his studies in St. Petersburg. Ekberg has also been said to have created Finland's "national pastry tradition".[156] At first, café culture was only a prerogative of sophisticated elite, when it recently began to take shape as the right of every man.[157] Today, there are several hundred cafés in Helsinki, the most notable of which is Cafe Regatta, which is very popular with foreign tourists.[158][159][160][161]

File:Markthalle Fisch.JPG
Fish for sale in the Old Market Hall (Vanha kauppahalli)

As an important port city on the Baltic Sea, Helsinki has long been known for its fish food, and it has recently started to become one of the leading fish food capitals in Northern Europe.[161][162] Helsinki's Market Square is especially known for its traditional herring market, which has been organized since 1743.[163][164][165][166] Salmon is also a typical Helsinki fish dish, both fried and souped.[161][167] The most prestigious restaurants specializing in seafood include Restaurant Fisken på Disken.[168][169]

File:Työpajankatu 2, Tynnyrintekijänkatu - Helsinki 2016 - G3634 - hkm.HKMS000005-km0000okav.jpg
A terrace of the Restaurant Roslund at the Teurastamo area

Helsinki is currently experiencing a period of booming food culture, and it has developed into an internationally acclaimed food city, receiving recognition for promoting food culture;[166][170][171] the city's gastronomy is considered unique, because many restaurants offers, in addition to fish dishes, reindeer, elk, and even bear meat.[161] The local food culture is made up of cuisines from around the world and the fusions they form. Various Asian restaurants such as Chinese, Thai, Indian and Nepalese are particularly prominent in Helsinki's cityscape, but over the past couple of years, restaurants serving Vietnamese food have been very popular.[162] Sushi restaurant buffets have also made their way into the city's restaurant offerings in one fell swoop.[162] The third prominent trend is restaurants serving pure local food, many of which specialize primarily in serving pure Nordic flavors.[162] In past years Middle Eastern food culture rose in its popularity. Especially Helsinki's eastern part offers many different options for Middle Eastern cuisine lovers.[172] There is also some touches of Russian cuisine, one of which is the Finnish version of blinis, a thick pancakes that are usually fried in a cast-iron pan.[173] One of the most significant food culture venues in Helsinki is the general public area known as Teurastamo in the Hermanni district, which operated as the city's slaughterhouse between 1933 and 1992, to which the name of the place also refers.[166][174][175]

A nationwide food carnival called Restaurant Day (Ravintolapäivä) has begun in Helsinki and has traditionally been celebrated since May 2011.[176] The purpose of the day is to have fun, share new food experiences and enjoy the common environment with the group.[166]

Other

Vappu is an annual carnival for students and workers on 1 May. The last week of June marks the Helsinki Pride human rights event, which was attended by 100,000 marchers in 2018.[177]

Sports

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File:2005 World Championships in Athletics 2.jpg
The Helsinki Olympic Stadium was the centre of activities during the 1952 Summer Olympics.
File:Helsinki Olympic Stadium Tower.jpg
Helsinki Olympic Stadium Tower

Helsinki has a long tradition of sports: the city gained much of its initial international recognition during the 1952 Summer Olympics, and the city has arranged sporting events such as the first World Championships in Athletics 1983 and 2005, and the European Championships in Athletics 1971, 1994, and 2012. Helsinki hosts successful local teams in both of the most popular team sports in Finland: football and ice hockey. Helsinki houses HJK Helsinki, Finland's largest and most successful football club, and IFK Helsingfors, their local rivals with 7 championship titles. The fixtures between the two are commonly known as Stadin derby. Helsinki's track and field club Helsingin Kisa-Veikot is also dominant within Finland. Ice hockey is popular among many Helsinki residents, who usually support either of the local clubs IFK Helsingfors (HIFK) or Jokerit. HIFK, with 14 Finnish championships titles, also plays in the highest bandy division,[178] along with Botnia-69. The Olympic stadium hosted the first Bandy World Championship in 1957.[179]

Helsinki was elected host-city of the 1940 Summer Olympics, but due to World War II they were canceled. Instead Helsinki was the host of the 1952 Summer Olympics. The Olympics were a landmark event symbolically and economically for Helsinki and Finland as a whole that was recovering from the winter war and the continuation war fought with the Soviet Union. Helsinki was also in 1983 the first city to host the World Championships in Athletics. Helsinki also hosted the event in 2005, thus also becoming the first city to host the Championships for a second time. The Helsinki City Marathon has been held in the city every year since 1981, usually in August.[180] A Formula 3000 race through the city streets was held on 25 May 1997. In 2009 Helsinki was host of the European Figure Skating Championships, and in 2017 it hosted World Figure Skating Championships. The city will host the 2021 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup. American football and the Vaahteraliiga has a strong tradition in the city dating back to the early 1980s; the Helsinki Roosters are the only Finnish team to have participated in the Vaahteraliiga since its inception in 1980 and are by far the most successful American football team in Finnish history.[181]

Most of Helsinki's sports venues are under the responsibility of the city's sports office, such as 70 sports halls and about 350 sports fields. There are nine ice rinks, three of which are managed by the Helsinki Sports Agency (Helsingin liikuntavirasto).[182] In winter, there are seven artificial ice rinks. People can swim in Helsinki in 14 swimming pools, the largest of which is the Template:Ill,[183] two inland swimming pools and more than 20 beaches, of which Hietaniemi Beach is probably the most famous.[184]

Transport

Roads

File:Helsinki region roads.jpg
Helsinki region roads

The backbone of Helsinki's motorway network consists of three semicircular beltways, Ring I, Ring II, and Ring III, which connect expressways heading to other parts of Finland, and the western and eastern arteries of Länsiväylä and Itäväylä respectively. While variants of a Keskustatunneli tunnel under the city centre have been repeatedly proposed, since 2017Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". the plan remains on the drawing board.

Many important Finnish highways leave Helsinki for various parts of Finland; most of them in the form of motorways, but a few of these exceptions include Vihdintie. The most significant highways are:

Helsinki has some 390 cars per 1000 inhabitants.[185] This is less than in cities of similar population and construction density, such as Brussels' 483 per 1000, Stockholm's 401, and Oslo's 413.[186][187]

Intercity rail

File:Helsinki Railway Station 20050604.jpg
Central railway station, inaugurated 1919

Helsinki Central Railway Station is the main terminus of the rail network in Finland. Two rail corridors lead out of Helsinki, the Main Line to the north (to Tampere, Oulu, Rovaniemi), and the Coastal Line to the west (to Turku). The Main Line (päärata), which is the first railway line in Finland, was officially opened on 17 March 1862, between cities of Helsinki and Hämeenlinna.[188] The railway connection to the east branches from the Main Line outside of Helsinki at Kerava, and leads via Lahti to eastern parts of Finland.

A majority of intercity passenger services in Finland originate or terminate at the Helsinki Central Railway Station. All major cities in Finland are connected to Helsinki by rail service, with departures several times a day. The most frequent service is to Tampere, with more than 25 intercity departures per day since 2017Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"..

Until 2022 there also was an international services from Helsinki to Saint Petersburg and Moscow. The Saint Petersburg to Helsinki route was operated by Allegro high-speed trains.

A Helsinki to Tallinn Tunnel has been proposed[189] and agreed upon by representatives of the cities.[190] The rail tunnel would connect Helsinki to the Estonian capital Tallinn, further linking Helsinki to the rest of continental Europe by Rail Baltica.

Aviation

Air traffic is handled primarily from Helsinki Airport, located approximately Script error: No such module "convert". north of Helsinki's downtown area, in the neighbouring city of Vantaa. The now closed Helsinki-Malmi Airport used to handle general and private aviation. Charter flights are available from Hernesaari Heliport.

Sea transport

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File:Helsinki (23883925315).jpg
The South Harbour

Like many other cities, Helsinki was deliberately founded at a location on the sea in order to take advantage of shipping. The freezing of the sea imposed limitations on sea traffic up to the end of the 19th century. But for the last hundred years, the routes leading to Helsinki have been kept open even in winter with the aid of icebreakers, many of them built in the Helsinki Hietalahti shipyard. The arrival and departure of ships has also been a part of everyday life in Helsinki. Regular route traffic from Helsinki to Stockholm, Tallinn, and Saint Petersburg began as far back as 1837. Over 300 cruise ships and 360,000 cruise passengers visit Helsinki annually. There are international cruise ship docks in South Harbour, Katajanokka, West Harbour, and Hernesaari. In terms of combined liner and cruise passengers, the Port of Helsinki overtook the Port of Dover in 2017 to become the busiest passenger port in the world.[191]

Ferry connections to Tallinn, Mariehamn, and Stockholm are serviced by various companies; very popular MS J. L. Runeberg ferry connection to Finland's second oldest city, medieval old town of Porvoo, is also available for tourists.[192] Finnlines passenger-freight ferries to Gdynia, Poland; Travemünde, Germany; and Rostock, Germany are also available. St. Peter Line offers passenger ferry service to Saint Petersburg several times a week.

Urban transport

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File:Munkkisaari tram stop at Telakkakatu in Eira, Helsinki, Finland, 2021 April.jpg
Helsinki tram network is one of the most dense in Europe.

In the Helsinki metropolitan area, public transportation is managed by the Helsinki Regional Transport Authority, the metropolitan area transportation authority. The diverse public transport system consists of trams, commuter rail, the metro, bus lines, two ferry lines and a public bike system.

Helsinki's tram system dates back to 1891 when the first horse-drawn trams were introduced; the system was electrified in 1900.[193] since January 2024Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., the system consists of 14 routes covering the inner part of the city center and one newer light rail style line connecting Keilaniemi in Espoo with Itäkeskus in eastern Helsinki. The length of the network is planned to more than double during the 2020s and 2030s compared to 2021, with major projects including Vantaa light rail, the Crown Bridges link to the island of Laajasalo and the West Helsinki light rail project connecting Kannelmäki to the city center.[194] Construction work on the new tram as the number line 13 (Nihti–Kalasatama–Vallilanlaakso–Pasila) has begun in May 2020, and the line is scheduled for completion in 2024.[195]

The commuter rail system includes purpose-built double track for local services in two rail corridors along intercity railways, and the Ring Rail Line, an urban double-track railway with a station at the Helsinki Airport in Vantaa. Electric operation of commuter trains was first begun in 1969, and the system has been gradually expanded since. 15 different services are operated since 2017Template:Dated maintenance category (articles)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"., some extending outside of the Helsinki region. The frequent services run at a 10-minute headway in peak traffic.

International relations

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Twin towns and sister cities

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Helsinki has no official sister cities except Beijing, China. On July 14, 2006, Beijing and Helsinki officially became sister cities. In October 2019, the two cities signed the Work Plan for Promoting the Cooperation between Beijing and Helsinki (2019–23).[196][197][198][199] In addition, the city has a special partnership relation with:

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Until 2022, Helsinki also had an international partnership with the Russian cities of Moscow and Saint Petersburg, which was suspended after Russian invasion of Ukraine.[200]

Notable people

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Born before 1900

File:Karl-fazer-historia-460x560.jpg
Karl Fazer, the chocolatier and Olympic sport shooter best known for founding the Fazer company
File:Erkki Karu.jpg
Erkki Karu, film director and producer

Born after 1900

File:Tarja Halonen 1c389 8827-2.jpg
Tarja Halonen, former president of Finland
File:Hirschovits Kim Blues 2013 1.jpg
Kim Hirschovits, ice hockey player
File:Linus Torvalds.jpeg
Linus Torvalds, the software engineer best known for creating the popular open-source kernel Linux
File:Esa-Pekka at Apple store in Berlin.jpg
Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductor and composer
File:Sam Lake.jpg
Sam Lake, the video game creative director known for the Max Payne games

See also

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Notes

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References

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  178. Video from the Finnish final 2009 against OLS from Oulu: Youtube.com
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  180. HELSINKI CITY MARATON 40-VUOTIS JUHLAMITALI – Helsinki City Running Day (in Finnish)
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External links

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