Tue05222012

Last update10:04:38 AM

Helsinki has it all

Tourists and locals relax and enjoy the sunshine in Esplanadi Park in the centre of Helsinki.HELSINKI can expect another bumper season for tourism this year, with last year’s record-breaking figures for visitors set to be surpassed this summer. In 2011 there were a total of 3,364,000 overnight stays recorded in Helsinki – an increase of 177,000 on the 2010 figures – and the Helsinki City Tourist & Convention Bureau expects 2012 to continue the upward trend.

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Go West, young man

Pedestrian street in Pietarsaari city centre.Pietarsaari – Jakobstad in Swedish – is a window to a very different part of Finland.

VENTURING to the far west coast of Finland is a rare feat for most Finns, usually reserved for summer festivals, weddings or maybe an occasional away sports fixture. But for those who seek the source of the elusive Finnish soul, the town of Jakobstad/Pietarsaari is as distant as it is domestic – i.e. a town well within travelling reach of the capital, but as different from most as you can go within national borders.

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Record numbers of cruise tourists expected in Helsinki

The Crown Princess, a British-American owned vessel catering for over 3,000 passengers docked in Hernesaari last summer.During the international cruise season from May to October, around 400,000 cruise tourists and 285 ships will visit Helsinki. This is around 15,000 visitors more than 2011, the year the last record was set. The cruise tourists will come mostly from the USA, Great Britain, Germany, Spain and Italy. The fastest growing group of visitors is from Europe. On average, each visitor spends 66 euros in Helsinki. 

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Come to Copenhagen

Café society, tourists and locals relax and enjoy the surroundings at the famous FIAT restaurant and (right) the beautiful grounds of Kongens Have.Denmark’s capital is a city recognised as one of the most environmentally friendly and is often said to have the best quality of life of any European city. Incredibly the water in the urban waterways is clean enough to swim in – not something many cities can boast. When you hit this beautiful place, Helsinki Times reveals the best places to visit and the must-see spots.

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A city in the heart of Savo

Kuopio’s City Hall, with Puijo hill in the background and the market square in the foreground.Despite its relatively remote location and modest size, Kuopio has something to offer everyone.

THE ROAD to Kuopio is long and lonely, and seems to stretch deep into the bowels of Finland. There is a certain monotony to the unerringly straight motorway, which reaches far over the horizon before being swallowed up by the endless lakes and forests. However, the long journey, which is interrupted only by uninspiring service stations and small towns with names barely pronounceable by the foreign tongue, has a most pleasant end point: Kuopio.

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Kouvola – strategic and beautiful

Kouvola’s city centre, Manski, is home to various shops and cafes

The largest railroad hub in the country is Finland’s gateway to the East.

HAVING been deemed “the most useless” or “the ugliest” city in Finland, the city of Kouvola might have a bad reputation. It is in fact very useful and can be very beautiful, but like many other things in life, in order to understand it today we must look back at its history.

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A year of records in tourism

Helsinki’s accommodation outlets recorded an all-time record in 2011 for the number of bednights. 3,364,000 overnight stays were registered, exceeding last year’s record by 177,000 and roughly 5.5 per cent. A new record was also set for leisure travel. However, the average length of stay decreased from 1.75 nights to 1.72 nights. On average, 9,200 visitors spent the night at accommodation outlets in Helsinki each night, with 46 per cent of these being Finnish travelers.

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When a Finn travels

In 2010, Finns made over six million trips abroad, with Spain the top southern destination.TRAVELLING has become more common among Finns in the last decades, and they have been going to more diverse locations as well. These are the findings of Statistics Finland’s tourism study, for which 2,200 people per month, aged 15 to 74, were surveyed, with overnight trips in and outside Finland and day trips abroad the focus.

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Logomo is more than a temporary venue

Logomo is located a stone’s throw from both the Turku Central Railway Station and the bus station.Logomo plans to remain at the heart of culture and creativity in Turku.

Throughout Turku’s year as European Capital of Culture, Logomo, as the main arena for happenings, was the name on everyone’s lips. Yet its substance may remain vague to many, while others ponder the future of the distinguished facility.

“We are not a temporary solution”, stresses Päivi Rytsä, the managing director of Logomo. “A fact that is manifested by the investments made here.”

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When families travel, it’s the kids who are concerned about the environment

Tourists sit by a hotel swimming pool in Phuket, Thailand in February.Business travellers often consider the environment, whereas holidaymakers rarely do so.

Inger Mattson makes a pile of tiny packages on her desk: vinegar, ketchup, mustard, milk, jam, sugar, a shower cap, a bar of soap and a plastic cup in a plastic bag. The packages are from a hotel in London and Mattsson, who is responsible for sustainable development at the Scandic hotel chain, is making a point: “This is something that I do not want to see when I stay at a hotel,” she says. And she believes that she may not have to in the future.

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Helsinki Times Information

Editor-in-chief Alexis Kouros
Editor Laura Seppälä
Publisher Helsinki Times Oy
Vilhonvuorenkatu 11 B
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Finland
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