NEWS
Reimagined Helsinki City Museum sets May opening date
POSTED 05 Feb 2016 . BY Tom Anstey
The museum site within five buildings on Helsinki's historic Senate Square Credit: Helsinki City Museum
Helsinki City Museum in Finland has announced an opening date of May 2016, following an €11m (US$12.3m, £8.4m) 18-month refurbishment of its premises, the most extensive transformation in the museum’s 105-year history.

Moving from its current home within Helsinki’s historical district to a new location in Senate Square, the museum will be made up of a group of five historical buildings surrounding three inner courtyards, opening up spaces never previously accessible to the public.

The development, which started in Q2 of 2014, includes 2,400sq m (25,800sq ft) of open public spaces and is part of a city-wide strategy to redevelop and rejuvenate Helsinki’s oldest areas.

The museum – which will be the only free-to-access major museum in Finland – has been completely reimagined. Taking into account the city’s constantly changing environment, the new Helsinki City Museum is focused around a new vision and public strategy, with public consultations every step of the way to allow public opinion to influence development.

The renovation of the museum buildings was designed by Arkkitehdit Davidsson Tarkela, with Hannele Storgårds and Aki Davidsson as the main architects, and Tuula Jeker as the project architect. The interior of the museum has been designed by Kakadu Oy. Design agency Werklig also contributed to the development.

The museum’s new home has been completely renovated with new spaces and routes opened up, and technology for modern exhibits installed. One 1960s building inside the block has been demolished and replaced by a new build, providing better access.

With its expansion the museum is incorporating the Children’s Town exhibition at Sederholm House. The museum is also working with the Hakasalmi Villa, the Burgher’s House, the Worker Housing Museum and the Tram Museum, which are are part of the City Museum's portfolio.

One of the museum’s key exhibits will be Time Machine, a space incorporating future tech to send visitors “back in time” to a realistic version of Helsinki in the past. Software company Futurice handled service design and the technological solutions as a partner in the project.

The museum’s opening programme, titled Helsinki Bites is designed to bring history to life with a walk back through time. The exhibition will showcase the museum’s collection of photographs and historical items, telling the story of Helsinki through resident’s personal stories. As part of the exhibition the museum has launched an open call in the city for the public to donate objects and stories that will paint a unique picture of relationships and histories from Helsinki.

“New museums have been rare to come across in Finland and free-to-enter museums even more so,” said Tiina Merisalo, Helsinki City Museum director. “We’re excited to welcome visitors into our new home, which was previously an unknown space to most people.”

Helsinki is currently undergoing a cultural transformation, spurred on by the €126m (£100m, US$160.5m) Guggenheim development. In addition to the landmark project, Helsinki is also redeveloping its central library to be completed in 2018, while the new-and-improved Helsinki City Museum will provide a platform for collective and individual activity that connects the past, present and future Helsinki.
The renovation of the museum buildings was designed by Arkkitehdit Davidsson Tarkela, with Hannele Storgårds and Aki Davidsson as the main architects, and Tuula Jeker as the project architect Credit: Helsinki City Museum
The museum – which will be the only free-to-access major museum in Finland – has been completely reimagined Credit: Helsinki City Museum
As part of the exhibition the museum has launched an open call in the city for the public to donate objects and stories that will paint a unique picture of relationships and histories from Helsinki Credit: Helsinki City Museum
The museum’s new home has been completely renovated with new spaces and routes opened up Credit: Helsinki City Museum
 


CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
 
Leisure Management - Reimagined Helsinki City Museum sets May opening date...
09 Jun 2026 Leisure Management: daily news and jobs
 
 
HOME
JOBS
NEWS
FEATURES
PRODUCTS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION
PRINT SUBSCRIPTION
ADVERTISE
CONTACT US
Sign up for FREE ezine
Latest news

05 Feb 2016

Reimagined Helsinki City Museum sets May opening date
BY Tom Anstey

The museum site within five buildings on Helsinki's historic Senate Square

The museum site within five buildings on Helsinki's historic Senate Square
photo: Helsinki City Museum

Helsinki City Museum in Finland has announced an opening date of May 2016, following an €11m (US$12.3m, £8.4m) 18-month refurbishment of its premises, the most extensive transformation in the museum’s 105-year history.

Moving from its current home within Helsinki’s historical district to a new location in Senate Square, the museum will be made up of a group of five historical buildings surrounding three inner courtyards, opening up spaces never previously accessible to the public.

The development, which started in Q2 of 2014, includes 2,400sq m (25,800sq ft) of open public spaces and is part of a city-wide strategy to redevelop and rejuvenate Helsinki’s oldest areas.

The museum – which will be the only free-to-access major museum in Finland – has been completely reimagined. Taking into account the city’s constantly changing environment, the new Helsinki City Museum is focused around a new vision and public strategy, with public consultations every step of the way to allow public opinion to influence development.

The renovation of the museum buildings was designed by Arkkitehdit Davidsson Tarkela, with Hannele Storgårds and Aki Davidsson as the main architects, and Tuula Jeker as the project architect. The interior of the museum has been designed by Kakadu Oy. Design agency Werklig also contributed to the development.

The museum’s new home has been completely renovated with new spaces and routes opened up, and technology for modern exhibits installed. One 1960s building inside the block has been demolished and replaced by a new build, providing better access.

With its expansion the museum is incorporating the Children’s Town exhibition at Sederholm House. The museum is also working with the Hakasalmi Villa, the Burgher’s House, the Worker Housing Museum and the Tram Museum, which are are part of the City Museum's portfolio.

One of the museum’s key exhibits will be Time Machine, a space incorporating future tech to send visitors “back in time” to a realistic version of Helsinki in the past. Software company Futurice handled service design and the technological solutions as a partner in the project.

The museum’s opening programme, titled Helsinki Bites is designed to bring history to life with a walk back through time. The exhibition will showcase the museum’s collection of photographs and historical items, telling the story of Helsinki through resident’s personal stories. As part of the exhibition the museum has launched an open call in the city for the public to donate objects and stories that will paint a unique picture of relationships and histories from Helsinki.

“New museums have been rare to come across in Finland and free-to-enter museums even more so,” said Tiina Merisalo, Helsinki City Museum director. “We’re excited to welcome visitors into our new home, which was previously an unknown space to most people.”

Helsinki is currently undergoing a cultural transformation, spurred on by the €126m (£100m, US$160.5m) Guggenheim development. In addition to the landmark project, Helsinki is also redeveloping its central library to be completed in 2018, while the new-and-improved Helsinki City Museum will provide a platform for collective and individual activity that connects the past, present and future Helsinki.



Connect with
Leisure Management
Magazine:
View issue contents
Sign up:
Instant Alerts/zines

Print edition
 

News headlines
Hoshino Resorts combats summer heat with medically-supervised cool bathing programme for KAI onsen
Hoshino Resorts combats summer heat with medically-supervised cool bathing programme for KAI onsen   09 Jun 2026

Hoshino Resorts has developed a “Cool-down onsen soak” programme at properties with Japanese onsen facilities – those within the company’s KAI .... more>>

Peloton signals potential move into reformer Pilates with Skop acquisition
Peloton signals potential move into reformer Pilates with Skop acquisition   09 Jun 2026

Peloton has made the strategic acquisition of Pilates start-up, Skōp, to support the expansion of its strength ecosystem.

....
more>>
Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for Global Wellness Day
Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for Global Wellness Day   09 Jun 2026

The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, in Malaysia, has revealed a schedule for Global Wellness Day (GWD) that includes guided rainforest walks, mindful .... more>>

Crunch Fitness creates more affordable reformer Pilates concept
Crunch Fitness creates more affordable reformer Pilates concept   09 Jun 2026

Crunch Fitness has announced the launch of Crunch Reform Pilates – its own reformer concept designed to bring this fast growing, but rather .... more>>

As the 20th State of the Industry Report is released, LeisureDB rebrands to Evolve
As the 20th State of the Industry Report is released, LeisureDB rebrands to Evolve   08 Jun 2026

The 20th State of the Industry Report from LeisureDB has revealed a resilient, expanding and competitive sector, the importance of .... more>>

Longevitix launches AI-powered platform to deliver longevity medicine at scale
Longevitix launches AI-powered platform to deliver longevity medicine at scale   08 Jun 2026

Longevitix, a clinical platform for preventive and longevity medicine, has launched its AI-powered intelligence system to help physicians deliver .... more>>

Company profile


GLL

We are sport, leisure and culture’s leading charitable social enterprise and worker-owned co-op founded on our purpose and values to provide a different, fairer and better way of doing business.

View full profile>>

Catalogue gallery


Featured Supplier

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect

CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds. More>>




in this issue

• Virgin gets right to wipe out rent arrears
• Fitness industry mourns passing of Jan Spaticchia
• STA offers mindfulness resources



Latest jobs

Jobs Search



Membership Advisor
Salary: Competitive salary plus commission & benefits
Location: Market Rasen
Company: Everyone Active
Customer Service Advisor
Salary: Competitive
Location: Market Rasen
Company: Everyone Active
GP Exercise Referral Instructor
Salary: £33,000pa + benefits
Location: Harrow
Company: Everyone Active
Diary dates
Powered by leisurediary.com

09-11 Jun 2026

World Sauna Forum 2026

Savutuvan Apaja, Haapaniemi, Finland







Published by Leisure Media Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385 | Contact us | About us | © Cybertrek Ltd