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Helsinki Railway Square

Coordinates:60°10′16″N24°56′38″E / 60.17111°N 24.94389°E /60.17111; 24.94389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromRautatientori)
Square in Helsinki, Finland
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Helsinki Railway Square (Finnish:Rautatientori,Swedish:Järnvägstorget) is an open square immediately to the east of theHelsinki Central railway station in centralHelsinki in Finland. The square serves as Helsinki's secondarybus station along with the mainKamppi Center bus station. The north side features theFinnish National Theatre, and the south side is formed of theAteneum classical art museum (part of theFinnish National Gallery). To the west side are the two ornate entrances to Helsinki Central station—a bigger one for public use, and a smaller one exclusively for thePresident of Finland and their official guests. The square is served by theHelsinki Metro system withRautatientori metro station entrances at the south-west corner, andUniversity of Helsinki metro station to the east.

During summer afternoons and evenings, the pub tramSpårakoff departs from theMikonkatu tram stop in the square once per hour.

The square is an important transport hub in the Helsinki capital region, as its west edge serves as the terminus of manybus lines travelling both internally in Helsinki and towardsVantaa. TheHelsinki tram lines 2, 3/N, 5, 6, 7 and 9/N run along the streetKaivokatu in front of the square.

History

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The Helsinki Railway Square and theFinnish National Theatre in the early 20th century.
Market activity at th square in 1909.

The site where the Helsinki Railway Square is located originally used to be covered by the sea, and even in the 19th century theKluuvinlahti bay was located at its place. A new city block was designed at the site already in the early 19th century, but nothing had been built on it when a new decision was made to leave it as a large open square, when the Helsinki Central railway station was built at the block next to it. When the first station building was built in 1861, the site of the Helsinki Railway Square was still full of watery wasteland and meadows.[1]

The square served as amarket square until 1928. The market activity ended when the square started to be needed for bus transport.[2] At first the market at the square sold firewood and wooden items, in the 20th century mostly wooden utensils, baskets and handicraft. The market stalls were mostly on the east edge of the square, on theMikonkatu street.[3]

Transport

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The tram lines originally travelled diagonally through the square. In 1910 the tram lines were rerouted to go on the west and north edges of the square alongKeskuskatu andVilhonkatu. In 1935 tram traffic on Kaivokatu started.[4] Terminus stops of bus lines were later placed on the square. At the last times before theHelsinki Metro was taken into use in 1982 and eastern Helsinki transitioned to collective traffic, the square served almost solely as a bus transport hub. Nowadays bus traffic is only served by the western part of the square, while the middle part of the square in front of the Ateneum museum and the Finnish National Theatre has been returned into a pedestrian zone. There have been numerous public events held at the pedestrian zone, such as a concert in support ofasylum seekers in March 2017.

Neighbouring blocks

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On some winters the square has hosted an ice skating rink with an entry fee.
Business buildings on the eastern edge of the square, from the right to the left theFennia House, theCasino Helsinki and theRadisson Blu Plaza Hotel.

On the eastern side of the square is the Kameeli ("camel", modern spelling "Kameli") block which used to be bisected by theKaisaniemenkatu street, whose northern facade facing the square is dominated by the Mikonkatu 19 building housing theCasino Helsinki and theFennia House at Mikonkatu 17, which used to house the famous hotel Grand Hotel Fennia, the most luxurious hotel in Helsinki at the time. Since then the building has housed many successful restaurants such as Aseveliravintola, Vanha Iloinen Fennia, Uusi Iloinen Fennia, Café Metropol and Restaurant Fennia. Nowadays the restaurant space has been joined with the casino. The inner courtyard building at Mikonkatu 17 was demolished in 1988 and replaced with theKinopalatsi film theatre in 1998.

The corner at Kaisaniemenkatu is dominated by the formerNokia head office Mikonlinna on the northern side and the former Osuuspankkitalo house at Mikonkatu 11-13 on the southern side as well as Mikonkatu 9 on the corner ofYliopistonkatu, which was originally built in 1929 as the head office of the Atlas Bank. The Atlas Bank went on the brink of bankruptcy because of its real estate investments, and already in late 1929 it was joined into the Helsingin Osuuspankki bank. After this, the bank building housed the film theatre Rea for several decades. In the 1970s the space was converted into the computer room of the Helsingin Osakepankki bank and in 1990 to the apartment sales office of the construction company Haka. In 1994 thePlanet Hollywood restaurant in Helsinki was opened at the site, with people such asRenny Harlin,Geena Davis,Bruce Willis andSylvester Stallone attending the opening ceremony. The space functions as a restaurant to this day.

Asematunneli

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TheAsematunneli space underneath Kaivokatu houses several businesses, a connection to theRautatientori metro station and underground pedestrian tunnels to theForum shopping centre, the Sokos department store, the station building and to theCity-Center (Makkaratalo) shopping centre.

Gallery

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toRautatientori.

References

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  1. ^Rinne, Matti:Aseman kello löi kolme kertaa: Suomen rautateiden kulttuurihistoriaa, pp. 162-163. Otava, 2001.ISBN 951-1-15804-X.
  2. ^Sundgren, Eva:Kluuvi - hetteiköstä liikekeskustaksi, City of Helsinki 11 April 2024. Accessed on 27 June 2024.
  3. ^Alanco, Jan; Pakarinen, Riitta:Signe Brander 1869-1942, Helsingin valokuvaaja - Helsingfors fotograf, pp. 120-121. City Museum of Helsinki 2004.ISBN 952-473-335-8.
  4. ^Rautatientori ja Asema-aukio: Kaupunkirakenne- ja ympäristöhistoriaselvitys, pp. 44-48. Helsinki Urban Environment 2020. Accessed on 23 March 2023.

See also

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Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata

60°10′16″N24°56′38″E / 60.17111°N 24.94389°E /60.17111; 24.94389

Helsinki Cityscape
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