One of the most anticipated openings has come shortly after the start of the new year. Last Saturday, January 4, 2025, the reopening of the most important modern building in the Finnish capital was celebrated.

The Helsinki Hall reopened its doors after three years of restoration led by the Finnish studio Arkkitehdit NRT, which has also implemented new facilities and improved accessibility.

The original project was commissioned in 1962 to the best representative of Nordic modernity, the architect Alvar Aalto, and the works were completed in 1971. The building was part of a broader master plan, also developed by Aalto since the early 1960s. It never came to fruition and intended to connect it through underground corridors, with other cultural buildings located on the shore of Tul Bay.

The renovation and rehabilitation designed by Finnish architectural studio Arkkitehdit NRT has allowed the organic character of Alvar Aalto's architecture to be preserved and maintains the striking formalisation of the building, which was conceived as a "Gesamtkunstwerk", a total work of art and has a main auditorium and a smaller chamber music room.

The rehabilitation has been a delicate process of fine-tuning, which began with a look back, both on the exterior, exposed to the harsh climate of the city, with the replacement of the Carrara marble slabs on the façades, and on the interior where surfaces and furniture were restored to recover their original beauty.

Rehabilitación del Alvar Aalto Finlandia Hall por Arkkitehdit NRT. Fotografía por Tuomas Uusheimo.

Alvar Aalto's Finlandia Hall renovated by Arkkitehdit NRT. Photograph by Tuomas Uusheimo.

The project has also been completed with a look towards the future from a technical point of view so that its facilities can provide an adequate environmental response, facilitating emissions and increasing their energy efficiency, as well as from its functional aspects that after sixty years were necessary to update, despite Aalto's innovative and flexible spatial solutions.

Arkkitehdit NRT has reorganised some of the more than 30,000 square metres of floor space, converting former storage rooms and cloakrooms into exhibition spaces. Underground work has added almost 2,000 square metres of new technical space, without altering the exterior, new lifts, accessible seating, new toilets, a new kitchen and new LED lighting. In addition, a café and restaurant have been added and will be open to the public in summer 2025.

Alvar Aalto's Finlandia Hall renovated by Arkkitehdit NRT. Photograph by Tuomas Uusheimo

Alvar Aalto's Finlandia Hall renovated by Arkkitehdit NRT. Photograph by Tuomas Uusheimo.

The main auditorium has 1,750 seats, and the chamber music hall has 350. A congress wing was added in 1975, with conference rooms and halls of various sizes and a concave glass façade adapted to make room for the old trees growing on the site.

Pirkko Soderman and architect Elissa Aalto carried out the interior design.

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Architects
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Orignal by Alvar Aalto. Renovation by Arkkitehdit NRT.

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Collaborators
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Interior design.- Pirkko Soderman and architect Elissa Aalto.

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Client
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City of Helsinki.

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Main contractor
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Skanska Talonrakennus Oy.

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Area / Dimensions
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30,700 m².

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Dates
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Original building.- Alvar Aalto, 1962 - 1971.
Renovation.- Arkkitehdit NRT, 2022 - 2024.

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Location / Venue
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Mannerheimintie 13 E. Helsinki, Finland.

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Photography
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Alvar Aalto (February 3, 1898 - Helsinki, Finland, May 11, 1976) qualified as an architect from the Helsinki Institute of Technology (later Helsinki University of Technology and now part of the Aalto University) in 1921. He set up his first architectural practice in Jyväskylä. His early works followed the tenets of Nordic Classicism, the predominant style at that time. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, he made several journeys to Europe on which he and his wife Aino Marsio, also an architect, became familiar with the latest trends in Modernism, the International Style.

The pure Functionalist phase in Aalto’s work lasted for several years. It enabled him to make an international breakthrough, largely because of the Paimio Sanatorium (1929-1933), an important Functionalist milestone. Aalto had adopted the principles of user-friendly, functional design in his architecture. From the late 1930s onwards, the architectural expression of Aalto’s buildings became enriched by the use of organic forms, natural materials and increasing freedom in the handling of space.

From the 1950s onwards, Aalto’s architectural practice was employed principally in the design of public buildings, such as Säynätsalo Town Hall (1948-1952), the Jyväskylä Institute of Pedagogics, now the University of Jyväskylä (1951-1957), and the House of Culture in Helsinki (1952-1956). His urban design master plans represent larger projects than the buildings mentioned above, the most notable schemes that were built being Seinäjoki city centre (1956-1965/87), Rovaniemi city centre (1963-1976/88) and the partly built Jyväskylä administrative and cultural centre (1970-1982).

From the early 1950s onwards, Alvar Aalto’s work focused more and more on countries outside Finland, so that many buildings both private and public were built to his designs abroad. Some of his best-known works include Villa Mairea, Noormarkku, Finland (1937–1939), the Finnish Pavilion at the 1939 New York World's Fair, Baker House, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA (1947–1948), Helsinki University of Technology, Espoo, Finland (1949–1966), The Experimental House, Muuratsalo, Finland (1953) or Essen opera house, Essen, Germany (1959–1988).

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Arkkitehdit NRT Oy is a Helsinki-based architecture studio, led by Kari Raimoranta, Jyrki Tasa and Teemu Tuomi. An architectural firm with long experience in high-quality and sustainable architecture. Our versatile design tasks include public buildings, renovation construction and housing design.

Their work has received numerous national and international awards. The studio has also received dozens of awards at different architectural events, has won two Finland Architecture Awards (2017, 2020) two Europa Nostra medals (2006, 2007) and has also been nominated twice for the Mies Van Der Rohe Award (2005, 2022).

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Published on: January 12, 2025
Cite: "Opening the Alvar Aalto's Finlandia Hall renovated by Arkkitehdit NRT" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/opening-alvar-aaltos-finlandia-hall-renovated-arkkitehdit-nrt> ISSN 1139-6415
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