Also known as Hakasalmenkatu, Centralgatan, Hagasundsgatan
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
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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. It is intersected just south of its midpoint by .
== History == thumb|right|An early plan for . The dashed, red lines indicate the actual implementation. The street was originally named (literally "Hakasalmi Street"), Finland Swedish: ') and was only one block long, stretching from to . The idea to extend the street through a city block to ease traffic congestion between park and the central railway station was first proposed by Helsinki Building Supplies, Ltd. () in 1913. A design contest for the proposed street was announced at the time, but ultimately never conducted due to the outbreak of World War I.
2 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).