Category
page 1Kluuvi
Helsinki Central Railway Station
railway station in Helsinki, Finland
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Ateneum
Ateneum is an art museum in Helsinki, Finland and one of the three museums forming the Finnish National Gallery. It is located in the centre of Helsinki on the south side of Rautatientori square close to Helsinki Central railway station. It has the biggest collections of classical art in Finland. Before 1991 the Ateneum building also housed the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts and University of Art and Design Helsinki.
thumb|100x100px|Exhibition of the Finnish Art Society at Ateneum in 1915
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Kiasma
Kiasma is a contemporary art museum located on Mannerheimintie in Helsinki, Finland. Its name kiasma, Finnish for chiasma, alludes to the basic conceptual idea of its architect, Steven Holl. Kiasma is part of the Finnish National Gallery, and it is responsible for the gallery's contemporary art collection. Its mission is to showcase contemporary art and celebrate the art od our time.
Rautatientori metro station
metro station in Helsinki, Finland
Nasdaq Helsinki Ltd
stock exchange located in Helsinki, Finland
Finnish National Theatre
Finnish national theatre organization
University of Helsinki metro station
metro station in Helsinki, Finland
The Three Smiths statue
statue in Helsinki of three smiths, created 1932 by Felix Nylund
Stockmann
department store in Helsinki, Finland
Hotel Kämp
hotel in Kluuvi, Helsinki, Finland
Helsinki Railway Square
square in Helsinki, Finland
Kluuvi
Kluuvi (; ) is the commercial centre of Helsinki, Finland, and a neighbourhood in the Vironniemi district of Helsinki. The Helsinki Central railway station, Hotel Kämp and Hotel Arthur, the Helsinki main post office, the Stockmann, Kämp Galleria, and Sokos department stores, the Kluuvi shopping centre and the main offices of Finnish banks are located in Kluuvi. Kluuvi includes the central campus of the University of Helsinki, the Ateneum art museum, the Finnish National Theatre and the movie theatres Maxim, Kinopalatsi and Bristol. The northeastern part of Kluuvi, which includes the Kaisaniemi

Kaisaniemi Park
park in Helsinki, Finland
University of Helsinki Botanical Garden
botanical garden in Helsinki, Finland
New Student House
building in Helsinki, Finland
Old Student House
building in Helsinki, Finland
Lyhdynkantajat
thumb|right|Two of the Lyhdynkantajat sculptures.
thumb|right|At night time, the spherical lanterns borne by the sculptures are lit.
Lyhdynkantajat (Finnish for "the lantern bearers") is a group of sculptures at the main entrance to the Helsinki Central Station in Helsinki, Finland. The sculptures were designed by Emil Wikström and completed in 1914. Lyhdynkantajat is part of the façade of the Art Nouveau station designed by Eliel Saarinen.
Asematunneli
thumb|A view of the ticket sales area for the metro station.
thumb|The entrance from Rautatientori.
Asematunneli () is an underground city and shopping centre connecting the Helsinki Central railway station and City-Center in downtown Helsinki, Finland. The area also has a ticket sales area for the Rautatientori metro station and connections to the nearby Forum shopping centre as well as Stockmann and Sokos department stores. The shops and supermarkets in Asematunneli are licensed to stay open longer than normal as well as during the national holidays, making it an important location for last
Baana
thumb|Baana in 2018
City-Center
thumb|Makkaratalo, the only completed part of the original City-Center plan
thumb|right|A close-up view of Makkaratalo viewed from Keskuskatu, showing the characteristic "sausage" in the middle
thumb|The Tallberg and Hermes buildings, which would have been demolished according to the original City-Center plan
City-Center is a partly implemented plan to raze and rebuild the block between the central Helsinki streets of Kaivokatu, Keskuskatu and Aleksanterinkatu, creating a unified, modern appearance for the area. The plan was originally drafted between 1958 and 1960 by Viljo Revell; Heikki Cast
Yliopistonkatu
street in Helsinki, Finland
Freemason's Tomb
tomb and memorial in Helsinki, Finland
Sanomatalo
thumb|right|Sanomatalo seen from Mannerheimintie.
thumb|right|Sanomatalo on the background on the left. On the foreground of the left is Postitalo and on the right is the Czech restaurant Vltava.
thumb|right|Interior of Sanomatalo.
Sanomatalo () is a commercial and office building in central Helsinki, Finland, to the north of Postitalo and the Helsinki Central railway station and to the south of the Helsinki Music Centre. It has twelve floors of which three are underground. The building was designed by professor Jan Söderlund and architect Antti-Matti Siikala and it was completed in 1999. It w
Eliel Square
thumb|right|280px|Aerial view of Elielinaukio right next to the Helsinki Central Station.
Elielinaukio () is a square on the west side of the Helsinki Central Station in the heart of Helsinki, Finland. It is named after the railway station designer Eliel Saarinen. The square is for the most part the departure and arrival platforms for regional buses.
Keskuskatu
thumb|right|, then , in the 1900s. To the right is the Skoha house, later dismantled to make room for the shopping centre, City-Center.
', literally "Central Street" (Finland Swedish: '), is a two block-long pedestrian street in the centrally located Kluuvi neighborhood of Helsinki, Finland. Along the street are located (from south to north): the Stockmann department store, the building, Domus Litonii, the World Trade Center and the Citycenter Mall, nicknamed "" (lit. "sausage house"). begins at , across from the Swedish Theatre, and ends when it meets , across from Helsinki Central Station. I
Mikonkatu
thumb|right|Mikonkatu seen from Esplanadi towards Kaisaniemi in the early 20th century.
thumb|right|Businesses on Mikonkatu seen towards Kaisaniemi in the 20th century. Photograph by Signe Brander.
thumb|right|The pedestrian part of Mikonkatu, a tram running between Aleksanterinkatu and Yliopistonkatu.
thumb|right|Mikonkatu seen from Yliopistonkatu towards Esplanadi before the tram track was built.
Mikonkatu (Swedish: Mikaelsgatan) is a street in central Helsinki, Finland, leading north from the Esplanadi Park to the Kaisaniemi Park, mostly converted into a pedestrian street in 1992.