Helsinki Warming
The city of Sibelius, known as a center for innovative technology and design, now stakes its claim as an urban hotspot
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Photographs by Yoray Liberman
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
The local media give the newest Nokia products the kind of coverage reserved elsewhere for entertainment and sports. At the company's glass-and-steel headquarters in Espoo, a city west of Helsinki, Damian Stathonikos, 34, a Canadian-born executive, shows me around; he is a reminder that Finland still imports some of its talent. Stathonikos demonstrates a phone that takes photographs and videos with the resolution of a high-end digital camera, and features Wi-Fi connectivity and GPS; another downloads and plays music with the quality of a nightclub stereo system. Each is priced at about $800.
"Our first market for these devices is what we call the Ôearly adopters'—18- to 35-year-old males with high disposable incomes who just have to have the latest gadget," says Stathonikos. "Afterward, when prices drop, come the Ôeager followers'—people like myself who have a family and don't have as much time and money to spend on the newest gadgets, but don't want to settle for a product that Dad is going to buy."
Finns generally consider themselves people of few words. But cellphones have banished the silence that once prevailed in Helsinki restaurants, buses and other public places. Nokia public relations executive Maria Kellokumpu waited until her son, Pietari, was 10 before buying him a cellphone. But her daughter, Venla, got her first Nokia at age 9 because all of her classmates had acquired them. "Now it seems that kids get a cellphone as soon as they start school," says Kellokumpu.
Perhaps the only Nokia-free environment in all Helsinki is the sauna. For thousands of years, Finns and their forebears have relished sweating in a blazing-hot hut and then plunging into cold water. Nowadays, Finns have about two million saunas, many of them right next to their home bathrooms. Finns of all ages visit saunas, but except for families, men and women do not ordinarily bathe together.
The Finnish Sauna Society, a 70-year-old private club in western Helsinki, sits at the end of a winding road on a forested peninsula jutting into the Baltic Sea. Waiting at the entrance stands Dr. Lasse Viinikka, president of the society for the past 16 years. Tall, burly and affable, Viinikka, 58, spends his non-sauna hours as director of the University of Helsinki's hospital laboratory. He suggests that I hold any questions until we've sweated a bit. We join a dozen other naked men sprawled or seated on three levels of the main sauna. There is a trace of fragrant smoke from the wood embers used for heating the room to what feels like near boiling temperatures. After about 15 minutes, we take a break. Viinikka walks down to a jetty on the Baltic and plunges into the 60-degree water, while I opt for a tepid shower.
Two sauna sessions later, we move into the "social room" for beer and open-faced herring-and-egg sandwiches. "Some people believe that sauna began as a prehistoric ritual to celebrate a successful hunt," says Viinikka. Can sauna reduce high blood pressure and tension? Is it good for the lungs and kidneys? Does it clean out pores and rejuvenate the skin? "There really is very little medical evidence to support whether or not sauna is good for the health," he answers, to my surprise. "Most important, sauna feels good—and it is a great way to socialize with friends."
When the weather turns warm, Helsinki's inhabitants stream to the dozens of islands in the city's archipelago. None are more historic than the cluster where Suomenlinna, a giant fortress—at the time, the largest construction project in the Nordic region—was built in the mid-1700s to discourage invaders. Its ruins are maintained by some 75 convicts living there in a minimum security prison. As recently as the 1960s, Finland had one of the highest incarceration rates in Europe. Now it has one of the lowest, with 3,572 inmates, or about 67 for every 100,000 inhabitants—compared with more than ten times that in the United States. "The simplest answer for the decline in our inmate population is that nowadays we use prison sentences much less than most other European countries or the U.S.," says Tapio Lappi-Seppala, director of the National Research Institute of Legal Policy in Finland. "We prefer other alternatives, like community service and fines."
I spend my final day at the spot where Helsinki was founded in 1550, on the eastern shore of the Baltic a couple of miles north of the present harbor. The neighborhood, known as Arabianranta, or Shores of Araby (a name conferred in the 1500s, when the location was considered remote from Helsinki), contains the Arabia ceramics factory that has operated here since the late 1800s. Arabianranta, an emerging center for design, is today the most high-tech residential and office complex in Finland. With 6,000 inhabitants and an equal number of employees, the wireless interactive neighborhood will likely increase its population to 10,000 by 2010.
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Comments (2)
Dear Editor,
I did not know until some months later that the item above (about the NZSO's highly successful Sibelius Festival) had been published. Would you use further material from New Zealand (as long as it has some relevance to Finland). Since I am retired after 49 years practising journalism in various parts of the world (including Finland at the 1952 Olympics), I am keen to keep at it for as long as possible. Regards,
Murray Masterton
in Nelson, New Zealand.
Posted by Murray Masterton on November 5,2010 | 11:34 PM
Dear Editor, Helsinki Warming,
You may or may not know that the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra has comnpleted a four-evening Sibelius Festival to full houses in Wellington, the country's capital.
No country is further from Finland than New Zealand, yet New Zealanders are ardent admirers of Sibelius' music and he knew it.Further, the orchestra has had Pietari Inkinen, a Finn, as musical director and conductor for the past year, and the orchstra leader and violin soloist is yet another Finn, Vesa-Matti Leppanen.
The programmes included all seven symphonies, plus Finlandia, the violin concerto and Tapiola -- truly a one-conductor festival.
And there is a personal touch: when I visited Finland for the 1952 Olympic Games (with Reuters) and later toured "med tum" I met Sibelius at his then summer vacation residence near what was Jakobstad. More to the point, I was taken there by an enthusiast host driver and as a result was thrown out (very politely, of course) by the master himself.
If you would like this 1500 words with Inkinen let me know by email (mediaptr@ihug.co.nz) and it will be sent by return.
If there is anything more you would like from New Zealand by all means ask. I am a life-long journalist, now long retired, but still keen on increasing my retirement income with an article or two.
My regards
Murray Masterton
Posted by (Dr) Murray Masterton on November 10,2009 | 11:21 PM