City of Helsinki Announces Funding for New Museum of Architecture and Design - – Design Competition to Commence in April

An international, two-stage design competition will be held to select the design of the new museum building. The competition aims to deliver a design that is architecturally unique, providing the framework for world-class museum operations and creating new, vibrant urban spaces in Helsinki’s rejuvenating South Harbour area.

The competition programme will be published on April 11, 2024, and the results will be announced in August 2025. The open, anonymous competition will be conducted in English. More details can be found on the competition website at admuseo.fi.

The competition is organised by Real Estate Company ADM – an entity owned by the City of Helsinki and the Finnish state – together with the Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design, and in cooperation with the Finnish Association of Architects SAFA and the City of Helsinki.

Helsinki City Council has voted to provide a capital donation of 60 million euros to the foundation responsible for establishing the new national museum of architecture and design. The Finnish state will match this funding, with an additional 30 million euros to be raised from private donations. With these commitments in place, an international design competition for the new museum building will be launched in April. The new museum will sit at the heart of a new pedestrian-friendly district in Helsinki's South Harbour.

Image: Sami Saastamoinen / Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design

On 14 February, Helsinki City Council approved a total capital donation of 60 million euros that will enable the Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design to realise its ambition of delivering a new museum of architecture and design. The Finnish state confirmed its commitment to offering equivalent funding in December 2023. The foundation will additionally raise at least 30 million euros from private sources, creating a robust private funding base for the museum project.

These decisions are significant milestones in the path towards realising the long-planned new national museum of architecture and design. The museum project will now continue to advance in line with the implementation plan published by the Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design in January 2024. According to the target schedule, the museum could open its doors in Helsinki's South Harbour in 2030. The museum will be operated by an entity that has been established through a merger of the Museum of Finnish Architecture and the Design Museum Helsinki.

“This new museum is set to both enhance Helsinki's global profile and provide a new, meaningful incentive to visit Helsinki. The museum will provide a cultural heart for the rapidly developing South Harbour area and a new, inviting urban space in Helsinki’s prime maritime location. It also represents a sustainable investment that will create jobs, generate commerce, and attract tourists to Helsinki. The museum represents an investment in the future, it is exciting to see the plans now coming to fruition,” commented the Mayor of Helsinki, Juhana Vartiainen.

Design competition to launch on April 11, 2024

An international, two-stage design competition will be held to select the design of the new museum building. The competition aims to deliver a design that is architecturally unique, providing the framework for world-class museum operations and creating new, vibrant urban spaces in Helsinki’s rejuvenating South Harbour area.

The competition programme will be published on April 11, 2024, and the results will be announced in August 2025. The open, anonymous competition will be conducted in English. More details can be found on the competition website at admuseo.fi.

The competition is organised by Real Estate Company ADM – an entity owned by the City of Helsinki and the Finnish state – together with the Foundation for the Finnish Museum of Architecture and Design, and in cooperation with the Finnish Association of Architects SAFA and the City of Helsinki.

For more information, visit the website of the New Museum of Architecture and Design.

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Helsinki uses design to create good everyday life - Children’s Design Week

Design is an essential cornerstone of Helsinki, the capital of the world’s happiest nation and a UNESCO City of Design, where design plays a fundamental role in maintaining the quality of life and building a sustainable future. This September, design can be seen and felt in the city even more than usually, as the 18th Helsinki Design Week and Habitare, Finland’s largest furniture, design and decoration event, take place. Design thinking starts already in school. The City of Helsinki together with Helsinki Design Week will be presenting their second Helsinki Design Award to Arabia Comprehensive School where design and architecture educations starts from the first grade.

Children’s Design Week, photo: Aleksi Poutanen, Helsinki Design Week

Design is an essential cornerstone of Helsinki, the capital of the world’s happiest nation and a UNESCO City of Design, where design plays a fundamental role in maintaining the quality of life and building a sustainable future. This September, design can be seen and felt in the city even more than usually, as the 18th Helsinki Design Week and Habitare, Finland’s largest furniture, design and decoration event, take place. Design thinking starts already in school. The City of Helsinki together with Helsinki Design Week will be presenting their second Helsinki Design Award to Arabia Comprehensive School where design and architecture educations starts from the first grade.

Helsinki Design Week – Good everyday life

The festival theme for 2023, Once upon a time, marks the start of a three-year festival period that will culminate in the 20th anniversary of Helsinki Design Week in 2025. The world situation has been uncertain for a long time and requires more planning and stability than before. The main exhibition explores the recent changes in our lives caused by distant working, which challenges our relationship with places – when private becomes public and home turns into an office.

Good everyday life is the theme of the main exhibition and the foundation of everything for the curator Ulla Koskinen, the founder and editor-in-chief of Asun magazine. “Good everyday life means balance, fluency, security, rest and charging my batteries; work and other aspects of life in balance. The importance of home, the workplace and our daily routes is highlighted – they need to be functional, beautiful and pleasant,” she states.

Helsinki Design Week takes place 8-17 September 2023 with over 130 events in different parts of Helsinki, from open studios to talks and exhibitions. 

Photo: Riku Pihlanto, City of Helsinki

Helsinki Design Award for architecture and design education

The Helsinki Design Award is recognition of the deeds and creators that make this city a better place to live. This year, the award focuses on architecture and design education, a field in which internationally acclaimed, multidisciplinary development work has been carried out in Finland for a long time.

At Arabia Comprehensive School in Helsinki, design thinking has been the backbone of the school’s activities and curriculum since 2016. Design thinking is one of the future skills that help the children to face challenges when growing up. School’s own Armu's A is a design process model that provides an easy five step view of the design process.

“Architecture and design education offer children and young people the keys to exploring and appreciating their surroundings as a learning environment, whether it’s a school, a neighbourhood or a city,” says Hanna Harris, Chief Design Officer at the City of Helsinki. “As a city, we can make see to it that, as part of the curriculum, architecture and design education support the wellbeing of children and young people, as well as their opportunities to be active and influence their own living environment.”

Photo: Habitare

Habitare – Together is more

Habitare’s 2023 theme, Together, explores the contrasts of our time. The new themed exhibition highlights this theme from different perspectives, including those related to people’s ways of being together and to objects. Designed by Studio Plenty, the exhibition brings monumentality and the small details of everyday life into the dialogue. The exhibition includes a section that changes daily in which objects that brighten up everyday life but often go unnoticed are highlighted and change hands.

Habitare features international industry influencers, such as Anders Byriel, CEO of the Danish textile company Kvardat, who’s the International Friend of the fair. Visitors can look forward to five days of inspiration, beauty, tips, discussions, current phenomena – and encounters that will create new stories. Finland’s largest furniture, design and interior decoration fair takes place at the Helsinki Expo and Convention Centre 13-17 September 2023 with over 400 exhibitors.

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